homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Great white sharks found to flee from orcas

The king of the seas has something to be afraid of.

Jordan Strickler
April 22, 2019 @ 11:23 pm

share Share

If Chief Martin Brody would have had an orca on him, Jaws would have been a much shorter movie.

Image credits: John Boscarino.

A new study published in Scientific Reports finds that even the king of the oceans has something that will send them scurrying. The report has found that great white sharks will make themselves scarce when orcas, often referred to as killer whales, have been found in the area. While reports of orcas attacking great whites have been sparsely recorded, this is the first evidence of great whites actively avoiding the whales.

“When confronted by orcas, white sharks will immediately vacate their preferred hunting ground and will not return for up to a year, even though the orcas are only passing through,” said Dr. Salvador Jorgensen, senior research scientist at Monterey Bay Aquarium and lead author of the study.

Researchers documented four encounters between the top predators at Southeast Farallon Island in the Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, off San Francisco, California. They monitored data from 2006 to 2013 of 165 tagged great whites and compiled 27 years of seal, orca and shark surveys at the Farallones. Within minutes of meeting the orcas, the sharks would hightail it to safer waters. Predator on predator encounters — dubbed ‘lateral interactions’ — have been well documented on land, however, those interactions are not as well understood in the sea.

“We don’t typically think about how fear and risk aversion might play a role in shaping where large predators hunt and how that influences ocean ecosystems,” Jorgensen said. “It turns out these risk effects are very strong even for large predators like white sharks—strong enough to redirect their hunting activity to less preferred but safer areas.”

The research team — which included Jorgensen and Monterey Bay Aquarium scientist Scot Anderson, and research partners from Stanford University, Point Blue Conservation Science and Montana State University — found that in every case examined, the great whites fled the island once orcas arrived at the scene. They didn’t reemerge until the following season. Previous research has shown that killer whales kind of have a thing for shark livers, which is probably one reason sharks opt for the flight option in lieu of the fight.

That behavior was also found to have a positive effect on the elephant seal colonies, as the data found four to seven times fewer predation events during those periods the sharks left. While some orcas will eat elephant seals, the locals have only been found to feed on fish.

“On average we document around 40 elephant seal predation events by white sharks at Southeast Farallon Island each season,” said Monterey Bay Aquarium scientist Scot Anderson. “After orcas show up, we don’t see a single shark and there are no more kills. These are huge white sharks. Some are over 18 feet long and they usually rule the roost here.”

I guess at the end of the day, Free Willy beats Jaws.

share Share

50 years later, Vietnam’s environment still bears the scars of war – and signals a dark future for Gaza and Ukraine

When the Vietnam War finally ended on April 30, 1975, it left behind a landscape scarred with environmental damage. Vast stretches of coastal mangroves, once housing rich stocks of fish and birds, lay in ruins. Forests that had boasted hundreds of species were reduced to dried-out fragments, overgrown with invasive grasses. The term “ecocide” had […]

America’s Cornfields Could Power the Future—With Solar Panels, Not Ethanol

Small solar farms could deliver big ecological and energy benefits, researchers find.

Plants and Vegetables Can Breathe In Microplastics Through Their Leaves and It Is Already in the Food We Eat

Leaves absorb airborne microplastics, offering a new route into the food chain.

Explorers Find a Vintage Car Aboard a WWII Shipwreck—and No One Knows How It Got There

NOAA researchers—and the internet—are on the hunt to solve the mystery of how it got there.

Teen Influencer Watches Her Bionic Hand Crawl Across a Table on Its Own

The future of prosthetics is no longer science fiction.

Meet the Indian Teen Who Can Add 100 Numbers in 30 Second and Broke 6 Guinness World Records for Mental Math

The Indian teenager is officially the world's fastest "human calculator".

NASA Captured a Supersonic Jet Breaking the Sound Barrier and the Image Is Unreal

The coolest thing about this flight is that there was no sonic boom.

NASA’s Curiosity Rover Spotted Driving Across Mars From Space for the First Time

An orbiter captured Curiosity mid-drive on the Red Planet.

Fully Driverless Trucks Hit Texas Highways (This Time With No Human Oversight)

Driverless trucks will haul freight in Texas without a human behind the wheel.

Scientists Rediscover a Lost Piece of Female Anatomy That May Play a Crucial Role in Fertility

Scientists reexamine a forgotten structure near the ovary and discover surprising functions