Forget Jaws, Now it's . . . Brains!
Great white sharks are typecast, say experts. The creatures are socially sophisticated and, yes, smart
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Compagno, 64, has run the Shark Research Centre of the Iziko South African Museum for more than two decades. He became fascinated with the animals as a child growing up near Monterey Bay, California, and studied them as a graduate student at Stanford. He took a job in South Africa in 1984, during the apartheid era, and "got a bit of flack from a few scientific colleagues," he says. But South Africa is one of the best places to study great whites.
Much of his work entails observing behavior, and he's found the fish to be a surprisingly intelligent creature. "When I'm on the boat, they'll pop their heads out of the water and look me directly in the eye," he told me. "Once, when there were several people on the boat, the great white looked each person in the eye, one by one, checking us out. They feed on large-brained social animals such as seals and dolphins, and to do this you have to operate on a level higher than a simple machine mentality of an ordinary fish."
Compagno has also found that they are not lone hunters but social animals. When great whites gather, he says, "some are assertive, others relatively timid. They body-slam, gape or carefully bite each other in dominance displays." Fishermen have told him they've seen the sharks hunt cooperatively. "One great white will draw the attention of a seal, allowing another to come from behind and ambush it," Compagno says.
And he swears that the sharks display curiosity. Seals, penguins and other animals sometimes have scars from shark bites; Compagno says the bites were investigative, not predatory. One of his students has watched a shark catch a seal in its mouth and toss it into the air repeatedly. Alison Kock says she saw a great white sneak up below a bird floating on the water, "gently" grab the bird in its mouth and swim around the boat. A few seconds later the bird resurfaced and flew off, hardly the worse for wear. Compagno even says that "some 'shark attacks' on humans by white sharks seem playful; I interviewed two divers here who were grabbed lightly by the hand by a white shark, towed a short distance and then released with minimal injury."
The great white shark attacks near Seal Island end as suddenly as they begin. The sea gulls stop screeching. Kock drops anchor and chums the water with a slurry of pulped sardines and tuna. "Great whites can smell this from a mile away and come because they think there's been a kill." She baits a hook with a large tuna head and throws it into the water.
"Shark!" she shouts, and I see an enormous dark fin slice through the water near the boat. I should know better, but I can't help it: on the tip of my tongue is the Jaws theme music, the heart-pumping duh-dum, duh-dum, duh-dum. Kock says that it's a female, about 11 feet long. Swimming with graceful power, the shark follows the tuna head as Kock's assistant pulls it to the boat before the shark can get a bite. Kock balances against the side wielding a modified spear gun with a blue electronic tag at the end. The shark pulls away untouched. It skirts the boat, swims to the other side, turns and—I swear—looks me straight in the eye.
The shark returns an hour later, and Kock is finally able to inject the tag on its right side, below the dorsal fin. The great white body-slams the boat, shaking it, then swims away.
Kock has tagged 75 great white sharks with electronic markers since 2003. She had divers set 35 detectors in the seabed around False Bay. Whenever a tagged shark passes within about 1,600 feet of the instruments, they record the time, date and identity of the shark. It's mid-September, almost summer in the Southern Hemisphere, and her research has shown that the great whites will soon abandon Seal Island and move closer to shore, patrolling the water just beyond the breakers.
Another great white approaches the boat but doesn't come close enough to be tagged, and Kock decides to check the inshore waters. We approach a beach where dozens of people are swimming. Kock spots a huge silhouette below the surface and steers the boat closer. "She's almost 15 feet long and weighs more than 4,000 pounds," Kock cries with excitement. It's the second-largest great white shark she has seen this year.
I stare, barely able to absorb the animal's immensity. Kock follows the shark, but it pulls away. After trying for an hour to tag the beast, Kock gives up. It's the one that got away.
Despite scientists' years of research on great white shark biology (see sidebar), they still have lots to learn about behavior—and migratory patterns. In 2003, Wildlife Conservation Society researchers attached an electronic tag to a shark named Nicole off the coast of South Africa. The tag was programmed to record the shark's position for 99 days before detaching. When the tag surfaced off the coast of Western Australia—roughly 6,800 miles away—it was the first record of a great white shark migrating between oceans. Nicole was apparently on a round-trip journey, because in August 2004, researchers spotted her distinctive dorsal fin back in South African waters.
A recent study of California's great white sharks found similar patterns. Some sharks make annual journeys to the Hawaiian Islands and back to the same beaches where they were tagged. Oddly, though, even more of them swim to a spot about halfway to Hawaii, a shark hot spot previously unknown to researchers. Stanford marine biologist Salvador Jorgensen calls it "the white shark café." He isn't sure whether sharks gather there to eat, to mate or for some other reason entirely.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (31)
+ View All Comments
Great White :)
Posted by Emily on August 23,2012 | 01:34 PM
I am totally fascinated with sharks;especially the Great White. Ever since I first saw the movie 'Jaws',I have been in total awe of these magnificent and quite intelligent species of fish. Steven Spielberg did a brilliant job of creating a film about one of the world's most fearsome predator.
Posted by lee on August 21,2012 | 08:30 PM
wow cool pics. NOT!!!!!!
Posted by khylee ensley on May 8,2012 | 05:12 PM
sharks are the most amazing creaters in the world
Posted by erin on February 14,2009 | 11:14 AM
Awesome write up. Thanks for sharing. Please allow me to point out some points about the "Malta" ex 23 foot great white shark. 1) First of all, when the measurements were taken, there was no one else present with John Abela, (the guy that made the 23ft. claim). 2) An english team of investigators did photographic test on some "lost / forgotten" photos of the shark and the results showed that it could not be more than 20ft at the most. 3) When these investigators question John Abela during a "live" radio programe, he said that he "could have" taken wrong measurements. 4) Those of us that saw the shark on the day that it was caught, estimated 18 / 20 feet. 5) I also held the jaws and measured the pectoral fins some years later, and allowing for shrinkage, they still do not match percentage wise to the size ratio abela claimed. The "Forgotten photos can be seen at www.sharkmans-world.com
Posted by Sharkman on January 2,2009 | 06:38 AM
i hate when people KILL sharks
Posted by raven hensley on December 25,2008 | 11:00 AM
wow this is relly cool. I was always fascinated by sharks, but this just opens a facination i might look into when i'm older!
Posted by Bahati on December 19,2008 | 04:56 PM
ive allways been interested in sharks and wanted to be a marine biologist since i was 6 years old and this article is great so this encourages my dream.
Posted by Tyler on October 16,2008 | 12:16 PM
This is an awsome article I couldn't stop reading. I'm studing sharks there really cool hope you make a speedy recovery and I would love to hear more!!!
Posted by Rachel on October 2,2008 | 03:52 PM
intelligent sharks? I 100% agree. I have seen and filmed a 7 foot silvertip shark "taking off the mask" of a diving instructor conducting a feeding. In fact the shark feeder teased the shark on previous dives and the animal clearly showed him the limits. "Today you lost your face in front of other human beings, ...the next time you will loose it physically!" I am pro-feeding, but is has to be done in a reponsable way. But unforunately there is competition and the clients ask for more and more and more .... photogtaphers want to get an even more spectacular picture, a closer close up. The statement. "we are not feeding, we pull the tuna head out of the water ...."( that is what they call baiting, ...it is not a feeding), is not very intelligent!
Posted by peter schneider on August 4,2008 | 11:00 PM
To state that, "it's mid-September, almost summer in the Southern Hemisphere" strikes me as a bit odd. The equinoxes and solstices occur at the same time in both the Northen and Southern hemispheres. Mid-September is actually a few days before the first day of Spring in the Southern Hemisphere. I'm not sure I'd call a date before the first day of Spring as almost Summer.
Posted by Dino Marino on July 29,2008 | 01:09 PM
i have a book calld chomp!
Posted by zac on July 15,2008 | 09:27 AM
Thank you to everyone above for the very nice comments about my shark feature, and for wishing me a swift recovery.
Posted by paul raffaele on July 14,2008 | 01:32 PM
i love sharks
Posted by zac on July 12,2008 | 09:57 AM
+ View All Comments