Reflections on Operation Swimway: Tahanea 2025

Reflections on Operation Swimway: Tahanea 2025

Please enjoy this video about Seahawk’s Operation Swimway expedition in French Polynesia in April 2025

I have adored sharks from a young age, diving with species worldwide and always feeling they are misunderstood. Sharks have populated our oceans for 450 million years, surviving five mass extinctions and becoming one of nature’s most successful predators. Yet we are losing around 100 million each year, through overfishing, finning, bycatch, and habitat destruction. Their loss destabilises ecosystems, as prey populations boom and food chains unravel, ultimately affecting fish stocks humans choose to harvest.

Grey Reef Shark and divers

Operation Swimway, managed by YachtAid Global with support from yachts such as Seahawk, works to protect critical migration corridors for sharks, rays, turtles, whales, and billfish. By studying where these animals travel, the aim is to establish more marine protected areas (MPAs). Seahawk has been involved since 2022, focusing largely on French Polynesia.

Research is complex, combining transmitter tags, passive receivers, and baited remote underwater video devices (BRUVs). These methods reduce human interference while capturing valuable behavioural and migration data. For this mission, BRUVs were deployed as deep as 70 metres using closed-circuit rebreathers. Tahanea Atoll was chosen for its three distinct passes, thought to offer unique habitats. Our primary focus was the Tiger Shark, classified as ‘Near Threatened’ on the IUCN Red List.

BRUV

The 2025 expedition carried great anticipation, it was the first chance to see results from three years of work. Seahawk’s crew supported four IREMP scientists led by Dr. Clementine Seguine, diving up to four times daily despite bad weather, illness, technical setbacks, and even sharks destroying equipment.

Early in the week, the Tiger Shark we tagged in 2022 reappeared, recorded 191 times passing through Tahanea. This confirmed the atoll’s importance and lifted morale. Each evening the scientists shared updates, reinforcing the sense of shared purpose across Seahawk.

Science team in stormy weather

On the final day, after an exhausting push to complete the study, the biggest breakthrough came: BRUVs recorded seven threatened shark species, including two three-month-old male Tiger Shark pups. Whether they were the offspring of our 2022 tagged Tiger Shark, we cannot be sure, but the discovery confirmed Tahanea as a pupping ground, an emotional moment for us all.

3 passes at Tahanea atoll

Back on the dock in Tahiti, I reflected on Tahanea’s raw beauty: pristine reefs, manta rays, hammerheads, and endless schools of fish. It feels untouched, alive, and strangely, happy.

In the months ahead, we hope the data will strengthen the case to protect Tahanea and other atolls. As Adam Alpert once said, we are “custodians of the planet”. Never have I felt that more strongly than during this mission.

Grey Reef sharks in Fakarava

“We all come from the sea, but we are not all of the sea. Those of us who are… must return to it again and again, until the day we don’t come back, leaving behind only that which was touched along the way.” -Chasing Mavericks

Written by Adam Cowley

Written by Adam Cowley

Chief Officer

Seahawk’s Conservation Projects Featured in Boat International Magazine

Seahawk’s Conservation Projects Featured in Boat International Magazine

Boat International’s Senior Sub-Editor Kate Lardy recently interviewed Adam Alpert, owner of SY Seahawk. In this excerpt from the article, Adam discusses how he and his wife Gisela incorporate marine research and conservation projects into their travels throughout the Pacific:

“Since buying the 60-metre Perini Navi ketch in 2019, the Alperts have travelled much of the world, but not as tourists on a floating hotel. They decided from the outset that improving the lives of those they encounter along the way would be part of the yacht’s mission statement. They don’t just write cheques, they are actively involved in community and research projects.”

Shark Tales Boat International Article
Shark Tales Boat International Article 2
Shark Tales Boat International 3

The Alperts hope to inspire other vessel owners to contribute to marine research projects in the parts of the world where they plan to travel. In the article, Adam Alpert comments on how super yachts can be easily used to aid researchers in their field work:

“It doesn’t require much equipment or real estate on the yacht’s part. “It’s actually relatively easy to repurpose a boat like ours for this kind of work,” Alpert says. “You don’t have to have a big expedition vessel or be a Jacques Cousteau kind of operation to do a lot of good things.”
“In many cases, all we need is two bunks, and maybe a scuba tank and a pair of fins and a mask,” adds Jimmy White, EYOS’s manager of technical, science and conservation projects.”

The addition of a science mission to a voyage is always a welcome delight, bringing a sense of purpose and intrigue. The crew and owners often accompany the scientist during their field work to gather data about sharks, manta rays, corals or the subject of their research.

Seahawk works with Yacht Aid Global to coordinate with local scientists and plan research missions, however, there are several organisations that vessels can work with to make a difference:

YachtAid Global

yachtaidglobal.org

Zoran Selakovic, executive director: zoran@yachtaidglobal.org

EYOS

eyos-expeditions.com

Jimmy White, manager of technical, science and conservation projects:

jimmy@eyos-expeditions.com

MigraMar

migramar.org

Erick Ross Salazar, executive director: erick.ross@migramar.org

Yachts for Science

yachtsforscience.com

Rosie O’Donnell, project lead: rosie@yachtsforscience.com

 Published in Boat International Magazine September 2025 issue: Page 104

“Shark Tales: from Jaws to … finfluencers” written by Kate Lardy