In the past, researchers had tested whether magnets attached to fishhooks could repel sharks. The tests had mixed results. Sometimes, the magnets worked. Other times, they seemed to attract sharks.
Raoult thought magnets would work better in certain fish traps. These large cages contain bait. Three openings shaped like funnels allow fish to swim in but not easily escape.
Raoult tested his idea with 1,015 traps. On one-third of the traps, he and his team glued four ice pop-sized magnets around each opening (see Testing Traps, below). A shark would have to swim through the ring of magnets to reach the bait. That made the traps different from hooks fitted with magnets.
The team also prepared two control groups. These served as standards against which the team could compare their results. They fitted one-third of the traps with pieces of nonmagnetic metal the same size as the magnets. This group would tell Raoult whether the pieces of metal were affecting sharks because of their shape instead of their magnetism. Finally, the team left the last third of the traps unchanged.