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 3 of 4)
Another surprise to come out of recent tagging studies is that great whites from California and Hawaii do not mingle with those from South Africa and Australia. No one knows why. This could pose a problem for conservation efforts: if one population shrinks, it cannot be replenished from the other side of the ocean.
Great white sharks' numbers have plummeted; along the U.S. Atlantic coast, for instance, the population has declined by more than 75 percent in the past two decades. The main culprits are commercial net and long-line fishing, which inadvertently snare sharks; fin hunters, who sell their hauls for shark fin soup; and the illegal international trade in great white jaws and teeth. "I've seen the bodies of great whites with their jaws cut out," says Mike Rutzen, who runs a shark-diving business in South Africa. "A jaw with all its teeth can fetch $25,000 on the black market in the U.S., and a single tooth can cost $500." Shark fin sells for $300 or more per pound. Hunters usually cut off the dorsal and pectoral fins and toss the body back in the water. Unable to swim, the shark can't pass oxygen-rich water through its gills and drowns.
South Africa was the first country to ban commercial hunting of great white sharks, in 1991, followed by Namibia, Australia, the United States, Malta and New Zealand. The great white was listed as "vulnerable" by the United Nations in 2000, and in 2004 the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) outlawed most international trade in its jaws, teeth, fins or meat. California and Florida have placed a total ban on killing the species, frustrating sports fishermen. Not that the great white should be regarded as much of a trophy. "The great white is one of the easiest of fishes to catch," says Rutzen. The sharks will follow bait right up to a boat.
Alison Kock says great white sharks are drawn toward land during the summer when other fish arrive with the warm currents. She shows me a photograph of a beach where I have gone swimming in Cape Town. A 16-foot female great white lies next to Kock's boat, disturbingly close to children playing in the shallows. The researchers never chum near swimmers, but find sharks with the help of spotters on coastal mountains who scan the waters with binoculars. (The spotters' primary job is to alert lifeguards when a shark is near.) "It's very rare for great whites to attack humans as prey," Kock says. "Imagine the hundreds of thousands of swimmers here each summer, and then count the number of attacks. Over the past few years you can count them on one hand."
Three years ago, about 20 yards from the Cape Town shoreline, Tyna Webb, 77, was taking her morning swim, as she had done for 17 years. "From the beach I saw the fin, then the whole shark coming out of the water," a witness to the attack later reported. All that was found was Webb's red bathing cap. A few years earlier, only three of four South African spear-fishermen who went underwater together resurfaced. Compagno examined the missing diver's wet suit when it was recovered. "The tear marks indicated it was a great white shark that had somehow cut him out of the suit and devoured him," Compagno says.
There have been 236 great white shark attacks on humans recorded since 1876. About one-third have taken place in California waters. This past April, triathlete David Martin was killed by a great white north of San Diego. One attack that particularly haunts me happened in Australia in 1993. Newlyweds John and Deborah Ford were scuba diving at a seal rock 400 miles north of Sydney. They were decompressing a few yards below the surface when John saw a 16-foot great white heading toward his wife. He pushed her out of the way, and the shark swallowed him.
Despite this grisly and disturbing history, Compagno says great whites intentionally attack humans even less frequently than the statistics suggest. Compagno says many "incidents" (a term he prefers to "attacks") are "bite and release." He thinks the shark is trying to get a better look at the strange creature in the water. According to the International Shark Attack File, a record kept by marine biologist George Burgess at the Florida Museum of Natural History, great whites leave the area two-thirds of the time after the first bite. According to his records, over 80 percent of people supposedly attacked by great whites in the 1990s survived. "If the great whites really attacked the people listed on the file, hardly any would have survived," says Compagno.
One encounter that was widely referred to as an attack—but almost certainly wasn't—took place this past October in Australia. A tourist on a kayak claimed she'd beaten an attacking great white shark off with a paddle. She required four stitches. "If the great white attacked her, she'd be mincemeat," says Compagno. The wound was probably caused by the sharp scales on the shark's skin brushing against the woman's arm.
The hamlet of Gansbaai, 100 miles southeast of Cape Town, bills itself as the great white shark capital of the world. Mike Rutzen's family—including his mother, sister, brothers, niece and nephews—opened a cage-diving business here in 2001. Brad Pitt has taken the plunge with the Rutzens three times; Leonardo DiCaprio and Britain's Prince Harry have also taken to the Rutzen cages.
But there are only excited tourists, Rutzen, the crew and me aboard the Barracuda today. Rutzen is famous around Gansbaai for diving with great whites without a cage. "The first time I was really scared," he tells me as we head out through a mist, "I was right by the boat and she came close to me. I nervously prodded her away with a spear gun. She swam away a few yards, turned and surged back at me. She thrust her face at mine and opened wide her enormous mouth to show me her teeth, and swam away. She was saying, 'Don't do that again.'"
A film shot for an "Animal Planet" TV program shows Rutzen with eight curious-looking great whites circling him. He strokes the nose of one, prompting it to open its mouth wide just inches from his face. It is a reflex response, not a threat display. Then the sharks are apparently scared away by the arrival of a larger 15-foot female. The female swims around Rutzen a few times, seemingly checking him out. He grabs hold of her dorsal fin, and she tows him about 100 yards underwater.
I have no intention of joy riding on the back of a great white shark. But I do plan to offer myself at close range to see if the animals consider me prey. We drop anchor about a mile offshore from a popular beach. Six other dive boats idle nearby, and within 30 minutes every one of them has a curious great white hovering around it. Rutzen's nephew, Morné Hardenberg, throws out a tuna head attached to a rope while two crew members pour scoops of chum into the water. "Shark!" Rutzen cries as a huge triangular fin breaks the water about ten yards from the boat. The great white makes straight for the tuna, and Hardenberg draws the shark up to the boat before pulling the bait on board.
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Comments (27)
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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
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