Whale tagging
Boston.com
The tag, a plastic-encased microcomputer about the size of a paperback book, measures the direction of whales' movements, allowing researchers to 'see' as whales feed and interact with each other underwater. It attaches painlessly to the whales with suction cups much like those on the bottom of a shower mat, releasing automatically several hours later and floating to the surface where scientists retrieve it.
The tag, a plastic-encased microcomputer about the size of a paperback book, measures the direction of whales' movements, allowing researchers to "see" as whales feed and interact with each other underwater.

It attaches painlessly to the whales with suction cups much like those on the bottom of a shower mat, releasing automatically several hours later and floating to the surface where scientists retrieve it.
(Globe Staff Photo / David L. Ryan )