The pregnant porbeagle shark, subject of
the study, after her release after tagging. Credit: Jon Dodd
Who
killed the pregnant porbeagle? In a marine science version of the game Cluedo,
researchers from the US have now accused a larger shark, with its deciduous
triangular teeth, in the open sea southwest of Bermuda. This scientific
whodunnit is published in Frontiers in Marine Science.
"This is the first documented
predation event of a porbeagle shark anywhere in the world," said lead
author Dr. Brooke Anderson, a former graduate student at Arizona State
University.
"In one event, the population not
only lost a reproductive female that could contribute to population growth, but
it also lost all her developing babies. If predation is more widespread than
previously thought, there could be major impacts for the porbeagle shark
population that is already suffering due to historic overfishing."
Porbeagles are sharks from the Atlantic and South Pacific Ocean and the Mediterranean. They are large, active, powerfully built—up to 3.7 meters long and weighing up to 230kg—and long-lived, living up to 30 or even 65 years. Females don't reproduce until they are about 13 years old, and then give birth to an average of four pups every one or two years, born live after a gestation period between eight and nine months.
Tagging and releasing a porbeagle shark. Credit:
James Sulikowski
Because of their slow reproductive
cycle, porbeagle populations cannot recover quickly from persecution,
recreational fishing, bycatch, and habitat loss and degradation to which they
are currently exposed. Indeed, Northwest Atlantic porbeagles are listed as
endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, while the Northeast
Atlantic and Mediterranean populations are critically endangered.
Scientific game of tags
As part of their research into
shark migration, Anderson and colleagues captured porbeagles off Cape Cod in
Massachusetts in 2020 and 2022. Each porbeagle was equipped with two satellite
tags, a fin-mount satellite transmitter and a pop-off satellite archival tag
(PSAT), before being released.
Fin-mount tags send the current
location to satellites whenever the shark's fin rises above the surface. PSATs
continuously measure depth and temperature and store these data until the tag
falls off, typically after a predetermined period, after which they float to
the surface and transmit their stored data to satellites.
Among the tagged porbeagles was a pregnant female, 2.2 meters long. Anderson and colleagues hoped to obtain data from this female to help identify important habitats for porbeagle mothers and their newborns.
Tagging and releasing a porbeagle shark. Credit:
Jon Dodd
But fate intervened. Unexpectedly,
this female's PSAT started to transmit off Bermuda 158 days after its release.
This implied that the PSAT had popped off and was now floating at the surface.
Data then transmitted showed that
this female had been cruising for five months at a depth between 100 and 200
meters at night and between 600 and 800 meters during the day, in waters with a
temperature between 6.4 and 23.5 °C. During this time, the fin-mount tag had
transmitted only once, confirming that she remained underwater most of the
time.
But suddenly, from 24 March 2021
onwards over the period of four days, the temperature as measured by the PSAT
remained at an approximately constant 22 °C, at a depth between 150 and 600
meters. Only one explanation was possible: that day, the unfortunate porbeagle
had been hunted and eaten by a larger predator. The PSAT must then have been
excreted about four days later, starting to transmit.
The researchers tagging a porbeagle
shark. Left of center: Beckah Campbell; right of center: Brooke Anderson.
Credit: James Sulikowski
Two suspects
"Two endothermic predator
candidates large enough to predate upon mature porbeagles and located within
the vicinity and at the time of year of the predation event include the white
shark Carcharodon carcharias and shortfin mako Isurus oxyrhinchus," wrote
the authors.
Shortfin mako sharks are known to
feed on cephalopods, bony fish, small sharks, porpoises, sea turtles, and seabirds, while great whites also feast on
whales, dolphins, seals, and rays. Of the two candidates, a great white shark was the more likely culprit, as shortfin mako typically make rapid oscillatory dives between
the sea surface and deeper depths during the day while in the open ocean—a
behavior not registered by the PSAT.
"The predation of one of our
pregnant porbeagles was an unexpected discovery. We often think of large sharks
as being apex predators. But with technological advancements, we have started
to discover that large predator interactions could be even more complex than
previously thought," said Anderson.
"We need to continue studying predator interactions, to estimate how often large sharks hunt each other. This will help us uncover what cascading impacts these interactions could have on the ecosystem."
by Frontiers
Source: Human mouth bacteria reproduce through rare form of cell division, research reveals (phys.org)
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