Apr. 10,
2013 — Many terrestrial animals are frequently observed scavenging on
other animals- whether it is a hyena stealing a lion kill in the Serengeti or a
buzzard swooping down on a dead animal. However, documenting this sort of
activity in the oceans is especially difficult, and often overlooked in marine
food web studies.
In a new study
published in PLOS ONE titled, "White sharks (Carcharodon
carcharias) scavenging on whales and its potential role in further shaping the
ecology of an apex predator," Captain Chris Fallows from Apex Expeditions
collaborated with University of Miami (UM) scientists Dr. Neil Hammerschlag and
Austin Gallagher, to explore the behaviors of Great white sharks scavenging on
dead whales in South Africa. The team documented as many as 40 different sharks
scavenging on a carcass over the course of a single day, revealing unique
social interactions among sharks.
The study
summarized observations based on four scavenging events opportunistically
observed over a 10 year period. In each multi-day observation, the team
recorded daily evidence of social, aggregative and feeding behaviors observed
in the waters off South
Africa . They suggest that although the
occurrence of coming upon a whale carcass may be sporadic, the shark
populations are likely prepared to scavenge on them, and may even rely on their
scavenging activities to supplement their regular feeding activities.
"Although
rarely seen, we suspect that as white sharks mature, scavenging on whales
becomes more prevalent and significant to these species than previously
thought," said Hammerschlag, who is director of the R.J. Dunlap Marine
Conservation Program at UM.
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