Two Orcas Near South Africa Are at War With Great White Sharks (kinda graphic)

TheFuser

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Two orcas named Port and Starboard seem to have developed a taste for great white sharks. Since 2017, eight great white sharks have washed ashore in South Africa, with signs of having been attacked by orcas. Seven of the sharks—typically apex predators—were missing their livers, and some didn’t have their hearts anymore.

The sharks’ wounds, as well as recorded sightings of the two orcas, indicated to a team of researchers that Port and Starboard were responsible for the killings, and they believe that more sharks were likely killed by the same pair but didn’t wash ashore. The findings are published in the African Journal of Marine Science.

“Killer whales are highly specialized hunters,” said Alison Towner, a marine biologist at the Dyer Island Conservation Trust and lead author of the new research, in an email to Gizmodo. “This specific type has learned how to target sharks for their lipid-rich, nutrient-dense liver, which can be up to one-third of the shark’s body weight.”

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Full-grown orcas can be over 30 feet long and weigh over 7 tons, according to Whale and Dolphin Conservation. Orcas hunt in packs and eat a range of prey, including seals and dolphins, but also sharks and squids. But great white sharks are formidable opponents; the fish can be up to 20 feet long and have hundreds of pointy serrated teeth, perfect for tearing apart flesh. But in this case, the hunters became the hunted.

Using tagging and sighting data, Towner’s team determined that the great white sharks have stopped visiting certain regions along the South African coast where the orcas have been feeding on the subadult sharks. “The more the orcas frequent these sites, the longer the great white sharks stay away,” Towner said in a press release.

The orcas (nicknamed Port and Starboard by the team) are throwing the entire food chain for a loop. With the ordinarily apex great whites vacating the area, a new predator—the bronze whaler shark, which is known to be eaten by great whites—is emerging. But the orcas are going after those sharks, too.

The reduced presence of great whites has also increased local numbers of their prey, Cape fur seals, which are in turn eating the critically endangered African penguins. “To put it simply, although this is a hypothesis for now, there is only so much pressure an ecosystem can take, and the impacts of orcas removing sharks are likely far wider-reaching,” Towner said.


Tough as they are, great whites are a vulnerable species, according to the World Wildlife Fund. With Port and Starboard on their tails, these sharks have no choice but to abandon ship—er, habitat.

 
WTF are they teaching in middle school science class nowadays?

Sharks are cartilaginous fish, Orcas are marine mammals.

Yeah.. fish eat other fish..whales eat other whales... sharks eat other sharks…and




We know that at least I know that

Not what I'm saying.

I didn't realize that sharks ate each other like that

Fish are not universally cannibals

I am confused what you both trying to say?
 
I didn't realize that sharks ate each other like

Fish are not universally cannibals

What are talking about?

I'm talking about the story, which is about how Orcas are killing and eating Great White Sharks off the coast of South Africa.

Your question about 'sharks eating other sharks' is the WTF moment of this conversation, due to Orcas being mammals and sharks being fish.
 
I'm talking about the story, which is about how Orcas are killing and eating Great White Sharks off the coast of South Africa.

Your question about 'sharks eating other sharks' is the WTF moment of this conversation.

Because the orcas doing that were not a big surprise to me.

The shark on shark stuff piqued my interest more
 
People don't usually assume this, but sharks constantly get their wig pushed back by marine mammals.

Whales, dolphins, you name it.

Sharks are dumb prehistoric predators with a relatively fragile cartilage skeleton, while these intelligent, strong-boned marine mammals will fuck the shit out of them.
 
People don't usually assume this, but sharks constantly get their wig pushed back by marine mammals.

Whales, dolphins, you name it.

Sharks are dumb prehistoric predators with a relatively fragile cartilage skeleton, while these intelligent, strong-boned marine mammals will fuck the shit out of them.
Sharks: yeah listen to this man , don’t fear us ,get back in the ocean, believe that you can beat us with 3 broken nip glasses and a pocket knife, we will avoid you at all cost
 
Around late 2010 or early 2011 I saw some video footage from an attack on a great white shark by an orca. I was the first I'd heard of great whites being preyed upon. Gotta see if I can find that video.
 
Hold on sharks eat OTHER sharks?

Orca whales do. They Mammals. Apex predator of the sea. Tonic Immobility. Turn em upside down and feast. They corral em like cows.



Orcas are the true Apex Predators of the Sea. No other animal hunts them. Mane fuck a great white shark.

Ohhhhhh, once sharks get a whiff of the slaughter of one of their own them mfs haul ass for hundreds of miles!
 
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Hold on sharks eat OTHER sharks?
Jeezus fucking christ..... as mucH time as you spend on the internet too???
:hithead::hithead::hithead::hithead::hithead::hithead:

The orca or killer whale (Orcinus orca) is a toothed whale belonging to the oceanic dolphin family, of which it is the largest member. It is recognizable by its black-and-white patterned body.


:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
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Jeezus fucking christ..... as mucH time as you spend on the internet too???
:hithead::hithead::hithead::hithead::hithead::hithead:

The orca or killer whale (Orcinus orca) is a toothed whale belonging to the oceanic dolphin family, of which it is the largest member. It is recognizable by its black-and-white patterned body.


:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:

I think he was referring to the part in the article where it said Great White Sharks have been feeding on Bronze Whaler Sharks. I could be wrong though.
 
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