This ocean predator is one of the largest and most aggressive fish. The color of the back and sides of the great white shark can be black, brown or gray, but the belly is always white, which is the reason for its name.

The average length of these marine inhabitants is about 5-6 meters, while the weight can reach from 600 to 3200 kilograms.

But there are also real giants: for example, once it was possible to fix a white shark, the length of which was 11 meters, and according to scientists, this is far from the limit. Those individuals whose length is less than four meters are considered adolescents and have not yet entered sexual maturity.

Scientists have established an interesting fact: great white sharks existed in the Tertiary period, and their length at that time reached thirty meters. The mouth of this monster was so huge that if this species had survived to the present day, eight people could easily fit in it. But such a neighborhood could hardly promise a person something good.


The great shark is a real fossil animal.

The great white shark is by nature a loner. It lives in almost all corners of the world's oceans, both in open waters and in coastal ones. Usually the white shark prefers the upper water layers, but if necessary, it can descend to the depth without feeling any discomfort. There was a case when this predator was caught at a kilometer depth. These marine inhabitants prefer warm waters, but also swim in temperate latitudes. The female, after the birth of the cubs, leaves no more than two alive, she simply eats the rest.


The white shark has huge teeth that are triangular in shape and reach five centimeters. And their edges are notched. The jaws of this fish are so powerful that it can easily bite through the bones and cartilage of its prey, so there are practically no chances of salvation for those who have caught this predator “on the tooth”. It is noteworthy that the teeth of the great white shark are arranged in several rows, so if the teeth of the front row are damaged, teeth from the back rows are put forward in their place.


It takes only a few seconds for a great white shark to swallow a prey it encounters. She can not be called some kind of special gourmet, she eats almost everything, including even representatives of her own species. In the captured white sharks, the bodies of the victims, almost intact, were found in the stomachs, the length of which reached two meters. If the potential prey is larger than this size, then the shark tears it into pieces, and then eats it. This fish does not refuse even smaller food. Their prey can be sea bass, mackerel, tuna, seals, sea otters,. She does not disdain garbage, and even carrion.


This type of shark is the most dangerous to humans. They are very often

The second article from the "Summer with Sharks" series tells about the famous representative of the giant marine predators - the great white shark, remembered by many from the movie "Jaws". Is this huge fish as dangerous and bloodthirsty as is commonly believed?

Meeting with a great white shark in the ocean is somehow not like what the imagination draws: the fish does not at all look like a bloodthirsty monster, about which thousands of television programs talk about with chilling intonations in their voice. She is very plump - like a fat sausage - with her mouth, as if parted in a self-satisfied grin, with shaking flabby wings. In a word, if you look from the side, one of the most dangerous predators of the planet resembles a gaping clown. And only when the "clown" turns to face you, so to speak, do you understand why this predator causes such fear - and they are afraid of him almost more than any other animal on the planet. The shark's muzzle no longer seems flabby - it narrows into an ominous battering ram with black unblinking eyes. The smirk disappears and all you see is rows of five-centimeter teeth protruding from the jaws (when they bite, they create a pressure force of 1800 kilograms per square centimeter). The shark is slowly but surely approaching you. Turns his head - first in one direction, then in the other, assessing whether the prey, that is, you, is worthy of wasting time on it. Then, if you are lucky, she will turn around, turn into a clown again, and lazily disappear into the underwater darkness. More than 500 species of sharks live in the oceans, but in the minds of the vast majority of people, there is only one. When Pixar needed a villain for Finding Nemo, they didn’t choose a harmless nurse shark or an aggressive blunt shark, or even a tiger shark, which would have looked more appropriate on the coral reef where Nemo lives. No, it was the great white shark that was grinning from thousands of posters around the world. This fish is a symbol of the oceans, but our knowledge about it is very scarce - and much of what we seem to know is simply not true. White sharks are not blood-blind killers (on the contrary, they act cautiously when attacking the victim), they do not always live alone and are probably smarter than scientists believed until recently. Even the famous series of attacks on people off the coast of New Jersey in 1916, mentioned in the movie "Jaws", may be the tricks of a blunt, not a great white shark. We do not know for sure what the duration of her life is, how many months she bears offspring when she reaches puberty. No one has ever seen great white sharks mate. or produce offspring. We do not really know how many there are and where they spend most of their lives. If in California, South Africa or Australia a predator the size of a small truck lived on land, experts would observe representatives of this species in zoos or research centers and study in detail its mating behavior, migration routes, and habits. But underwater have their own laws. White sharks appear and disappear at will, and it is almost impossible to follow them into the depths of the sea. They do not want to live in aquariums - some refuse to eat and die of hunger, others attack all neighbors and smash their heads against the walls. And yet, scientists using modern technology may already be close to answering two of the most exciting questions: how many great white sharks are and where they hide. This is necessary to know in order to decide how to protect ourselves from white sharks and how to protect them from us, and to understand what the most terrible predator on the planet deserves more - fear or pity.

Brian Skerry A great white shark rips up the water surface near the Neptune Islands. Scientists distinguish sharks by their dorsal fins, scars, and a jagged line separating the white ventral and gray dorsal parts of the body.

A seven-meter fishing boat bobs in the waves off the southern tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. It's a beautiful summer day. The passengers—three scientists, two paid tourists, a couple of journalists, and the captain—were comfortably seated, looking out toward Nantucket Island. Suddenly, the walkie-talkie comes to life, and the voice of the pilot-observer from a height of 300 meters says in a sharp New England accent: “There is a great shark to the south of you!”. Marine biologist Greg Skomal perks up. He stands on a bridge fenced with railings, protruding one and a half meters ahead of the bow of the boat and similar to a board along which pirates pushed those sentenced to death into the sea. If we were in a Hollywood movie, Greg would have a wooden leg and a harpoon in his hands. But instead of a harpoon, Greg is holding a three-meter pole, at the end of which is a GoPro camera. And beams with joy when the captain starts the engine. Until 2004, almost no one saw great white sharks off the East Coast of the United States. From time to time, individual individuals appeared near the beaches or fell into the nets, but this happened very infrequently. In general, white sharks gather at certain times of the year in five areas that scientists call "hubs", by analogy with hub airports. The three main hubs are off the coast of California and Baja California, southern South Africa and Australia, where these predators prey on seals. However, the East Coast is not the right place: there are not enough seals here. The sharks that swam here were homeless vagrants. In 2004, one female made her way into the bays near the village of Woods Hole, Massachusetts. For Skomal, who by that time had been successfully marking other types of sharks with electronic beacons for twenty years, this was a rare chance: a big white appeared, one might say, right in his yard! “I thought it was an accident that will never happen again,” he says, a smile playing across his face framed by tousled gray hair. Over the next two weeks, Skomal and his colleagues followed the shark, which they named Gretel, after the lost girl from the Brothers Grimm's fairy tale, and eventually provided her with a beacon. Scientists hoped to track the movement of the shark in the Atlantic Ocean, but after 45 minutes Gretel's beacon fell off. “My excitement turned to deep despondency, because I was sure that I had missed the only chance in my life to learn something new about the great white shark,” recalls Skomal. Over the next few years, he thought a lot about Gretel and whether she really was a loner. But in September 2009, everything, fortunately, cleared up: five great white sharks were spotted from an airplane near the cape. Within a week, Skomal had tagged them all. “I almost went crazy with joy. My heart was beating so hard it was ready to jump out of my chest. Everything I dreamed of came true! says Greg. Since then, great white sharks have returned every summer. Some scholars have even named Cape Cod as the sixth hub. How many sharks are there? To answer this question, let's turn to the data on the California hub. The first attempt to count sharks here was made in the mid-1980s by Scot Anderson, who at the time was studying seabirds on an island west of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Anderson and his colleagues tracked the sharks, first visually, then with acoustic beacons, and finally with satellites. Over the past 30 years, they have processed data from thousands of observations of individual sharks, which were distinguished by the shape of the dorsal fins, markings on the skin, or by the characteristic border between the gray back and white belly. Now we know where these sharks gather and what they eat (most of the “observations” returned here year after year). So is it possible, based on such observations, to determine the number of sharks? In 2011, a group of scientists tried to make such a calculation, and it turned out that only 219 adults live in the richest shark area in California. Even taking into account the fact that the number of predators at the top of the food pyramid is usually much smaller than the number of animals they prey on, this is still negligible. The results of the study stunned the public and were immediately criticized by other specialists.


Brian Skerry Biologist Greg Skomal tries to make a video of a shark swimming near Cape Cod. Recently, great white sharks have begun to regularly appear in the waters off the popular beach.

Of course, counting the number of great white sharks is much more difficult. than land animals or even marine mammals. Therefore, scientists draw conclusions based on their assumptions about the ways of movement of sharks. In the case of the California coast, the most important assumption was that the data on several feeding sites were extended to the entire hub. Another group of scientists processed the same data using different assumptions, and they found the number of sharks to be ten times greater (although they also counted juveniles). Soon, ichthyologists began to count sharks in other hubs. Let's say the population of South African sharks was estimated at 900 individuals. How big or small are these numbers? Are great white sharks thriving or dying out? There are about 4,000 tigers and 25,000 African lions in the world. Based on the lowest estimates, there are as many great white sharks on the planet as tigers, and they are known to be a threatened species. If we take the highest ratings, then these fish are no less than lions - a vulnerable species. Some experts believe that sharks are dying out, others, on the contrary, see positive changes. Some say that the increase in the number of seals indicates that there are almost no great white sharks left, others argue that the more seals, the more sharks should be. For example, Australian statistician Aaron McNeil argues that the appearance of sharks off Cape Cod and the increased sightings of sharks in the Southern Hemisphere support an optimistic view. “Over the past decade, I don’t see any evidence that sharks have become smaller,” McNeil says. – In the past there was a period of decline in numbers, but today it cannot be said that great white sharks are dying out. Perhaps their numbers are growing very slowly, but growing.” Hope remains. Today, if anyone catches great white sharks purposefully, there are very few such fishermen - however, in the Convention on International Trade in Threatened Species, this species is listed in the second most severe category of protection, because it happens that fishermen catch these fish unintentionally. After all, if the number of the species is small, even an accidental catch can deal a crushing blow to its populations - and the great white shark, being a top predator, plays a crucial role in the ecology of the oceans. To see if great white sharks need our protection, it is necessary to know not only their number, but also where they wander. Their migration paths are not as ordered as, say, birds or butterflies. Some sharks follow along the coast, others tack hundreds of kilometers into the open sea. Many white sharks, depending on the time of year, change warm waters to cold ones and vice versa. And it looks like males, females, and juveniles follow different paths. Today, with long-term satellite beacons, scientists are finally beginning to understand these intricacies. We now know that adult white sharks in California and Mexico leave the coastal zone in late autumn and go deep into the middle of the Pacific Ocean. “It’s not at all clear why they go to this area, which some call an oceanic desert,” says Salvador Jorgensen, a biologist who studies the migration and ecology of great white sharks. “What the hell are they doing there?” Isn't this "shark center" where great white sharks mate like no one has ever seen? The water area in question is the size of California, and the depths there reach kilometers, and it is difficult to watch sharks. However, satellite beacon data shows that the females are following direct routes, while the males are surfacing and diving, probably in search of mates.

This is how the idea of ​​the life of the great white sharks of the California coast is gradually formed. After spending the summer and autumn hunting seals, they head to the ocean depths to start breeding. They live at this time due to the accumulated fat reserves. Then the males return to the coast, and the females swim off somewhere for a year or so, perhaps to give birth to offspring. The young are later shown to feeding grounds (eg off the coast of Southern California) where they feed on fish before they grow large enough to join their older brethren. The picture drawn is not complete - males and females do not spend much time together, and we do not know where the cubs are born - but it explains a lot. For example, as the population recovers, more young appear, which may be why there have been so many sharks in Southern California lately. In other places, the calculations are more difficult. Australian sharks feed off the southern coast of the mainland, but they do not seem to have their own "center". As for the Atlantic, here our knowledge is even poorer. “We have 'tramps' and we have coastal sharks. And I have no idea what drives both of them,” says Greg Skomal. On a clear August morning, I board a two-seat plane with Wayne Davis, a pilot who has been tracking tuna and swordfish for fishermen for many years and is now helping scientists find great white sharks. It is so shallow here that sharks can be seen from the air. In just half an hour of flight, we see seven - they all patrol parts of the coast, next to which gray seals feed. On the way back, a mile to the north, we fly over beaches crowded with vacationers. So far, the locals are welcoming new neighbors. Shops sell toy sharks, T-shirts and posters featuring them, even the local high school's new mascot, the great white shark. Sharks, as a rule, are depicted in profile - smiling, similar to clowns. But sooner or later, someone will meet in the local waters another version of the great white shark - the one with teeth. However, these predators rarely encroach on people's lives. In California, the chance of a surfer being bitten by a great white shark is one in 17 million, according to Stanford University, and even less for people just swimming in the water, at one in 738 million vacationers. Will we be able to lend a helping hand to this toothy monster, are we ready to pity the ruthless monster?

Perhaps the most dangerous and formidable predator of the world's oceans is the white shark. According to the scientific classification, white sharks belong to the chordate type, the herring family, the class of cartilaginous fish, the superorder of sharks and the order of lamniformes.

What are its characteristics, weight, length, appearance? Where does the white shark live and is it dangerous to humans? This will be discussed in detail below.

Great White Shark Carcharodon

The great white shark, also known to science as the carcharodon, is a large predatory fish that lives in all waters of the world's oceans with the exception of the Arctic. This predator got its name due to the white color of the belly, which is clearly separated from the gray color of the back by a broken line.

Medium the length of the carcharodon exceeds 7 meters, and its weight is at least 3 tons. This rightfully suggests that such a fish is the largest on earth. It can compete only with whale and giant sharks, which are not dangerous to humans and feed mainly on plankton.

But not only the size of the carcharodon terrifies all living things, because such a predatory fish is firmly entrenched in the minds of people as a merciless killer, ready to attack at any opportunity. So it is: these giant predatory fish are known for attacking water sports enthusiasts(divers, surfers, swimmers).

And according to statistics, the chances of escaping from such a predator are much less than when falling under the wheels of a truck: if the carcharodon began to pursue and attack its prey, then it does not stop until it finally tastes human flesh.

Interestingly, the great white shark is on the verge of extinction, and there are only about 3500 individuals. As mentioned earlier, this predator belongs to the herring family, this also includes a number of sharks:

  • ordinary mako;
  • longfin mako;
  • Pacific salmon;
  • Atlantic herring.

Carcharodon is believed to be one of the oldest organisms on the planet, and this opinion was given impetus by the research of scientists who came to the conclusion: the white shark is a close relative of the megalodon, which became extinct 5.5 million years ago. However, at the same time, other scientists believe that the carcharodon is still closer to the mako shark than to the ancient megalodon.

Range of great white sharks

The great white shark can be found in all waters of the world's oceans, where the temperature is not lower than 12 degrees and not higher than 24 degrees. In colder water, these predators are extremely rare. It is also interesting that such a fish lives both in salt water and in low-salt and desalinated water.

An interesting fact: such a predator does not and could not live in the Black Sea. This is due to the fact that the water here is too fresh, besides, there is not enough food in the Black Sea for the survival of this predatory fish.

Carcharodon can be found on the coast USA, Canada, Guadeloupe, Argentina, Chile, Japan, China, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, as well as off the coast of Croatia and Italy, Portugal and North Africa. By the way, in New Zealand this species is protected.

largest population lives off Dyer Island that in South Africa. Scientific studies of these predatory fish are also carried out there.

White sharks settle in the waters of the seas. They feed on fur seals, whales, and large bony fish. And only a large killer whale is capable of terrifying this predator.

Like most other sharks, Carcharodon has a fusiform, streamlined body, a conical head, small eyes, nostrils, and a wide mouth. The teeth of this fish are very sharp. They have a triangular shape, on the sides they have small notches.

The approximate number of teeth varies from 280 to 300 pieces; with their help, the predator easily deals with prey. All Carcharodon Teeth arranged in 5 rows. The change of the first row of teeth occurs in young individuals once every three months, and in adults - once every eight months.

The white shark also has gills, which are located on the sides of the head (5 gill slits on each side). The color is typical for all such fish: belly white, back gray. Thanks to such a transition from one color to another, this predator can easily hunt in the water column and at the same time remain invisible.

On the back of the carcharodon is one fin, two on the chest. The tail has a fin with two lobes of the same size. Carcharodons have a very developed circulatory system, which warms up the muscles and allows the predator to swim quickly.

It is interesting that this fish no swim bladder, because of which she has to be on the move all the time, otherwise she will simply start to sink. But, obviously, such anatomy does not in the least prevent her from living in the depths of the seas and oceans for millions of years.

Dimensions: how much does a white shark weigh and what is its length

For many years, ichthyologists have been researching and arguing about the size of this formidable predator and how much such a fish weighs. One of the largest white sharks was recognized as caught at the end of the 19th century in Australian waters, which had a length of almost 11 meters.

Another larger specimen was caught off the coast of Canada in the first half of the 20th century. His length was 11.3 meters.

If we talk about the average size of carcharodon, then they are as follows:

  • medium shark - from 4 to 5.2 meters in length and 700-1000 kg in weight;
  • big shark - from 6 to 8 meters in length and 3500 kg in weight.

As a rule, females are larger than males. A big shark can be called one whose size is from 6 meters to 7.5 meters. The largest white shark can reach 12 meters in length.

And yet scientific disputes do not stop to this day. Ichthyologists question the facts about the capture of the largest carcharodons, since the difference in size between them and other white sharks is too great.

Scientists believe that the record figures are more likely not for carcharodons, but for giant sharks, thus, which feed on plankton. Moreover, the fact of catching the largest shark off the coast of Australia and Canada was recorded not by scientists, but by ordinary fishermen.

To date, the largest size of carcharodon is considered length 6.4 m and weight 3270 kg.

What does Carcharodon eat?

Juveniles feed on small bony fish, small marine animals and mammals.

More mature individuals hunting fur seals, sea lions, shellfish, big fish, even other sharks and whales.

Due to their coloration, these predators can easily camouflage themselves while hunting, and their high body temperature allows them to move quickly and catch up with your prey. And also, thanks to active movements, active brain activity occurs, thanks to which this predator is able to come up with ingenious strategies during the hunt.

By the way, about attacks on people: very often surfers and swimmers remind carcharodons of the same sea seals with their body movements, so she can actively attack them.

But here it is worth taking into account the fact that these predatory fish prefer fatty foods. Therefore, after biting a person and tasting it, the shark swims away in disappointment. So the opinion that such predators feed on human flesh is very erroneous.

White shark (Carcharodon carcharias)

general description

The white shark (Carcharodon carcharias), which is more correctly called carcharodon, reaches especially significant sizes - the largest of modern predatory sharks. Its back and sides are painted gray, brown or black, and the belly is off-white. The largest specimen of this species measured was 11 m in length, although apparently even larger specimens are sometimes found. The usual size of a white shark is 5-6 m and weighs 600-3200 kg. At the same time, sharks about 4 m long have not yet reached sexual maturity. It is interesting to note that until relatively recently (at the end of the Tertiary period) there were white sharks (the species Carcharodon megalodon), reaching about 30 m in length.

In the mouth of such a shark, eight people could freely accommodate. The modern white shark leads a solitary lifestyle and is found both in the open ocean and offshore. This shark usually keeps near the surface, but can descend into the deep layers of water: one specimen was caught even at a depth of about 1000 m. The white shark is widespread in the warm waters of all oceans, meeting in warm temperate waters. Its occurrences have been noted, in particular, in the southern part of the Sea of ​​Japan, off the coast of Washington state and California, on the Pacific coast of the United States, and even off the island of Newfoundland.

This species is characterized by very large (up to 5 cm in height) and wide teeth, which are triangular in shape and roughly serrated at the edges. The very powerful armament of the jaws gives the white shark the ability to inflict terrible damage on its prey and bite through the bones and cartilage of the victims without much effort, and the wide mouth and throat allow this giant shark to swallow very large pieces. Apparently, the white shark is not particularly picky in the choice of food, although most often other sharks were found in the stomachs of captured individuals, which he obviously preys on. In this case, relatively small sharks (sometimes exceeding 2 m in length) are usually swallowed intact, while larger ones, such as a giant shark, are torn to pieces.

The diet of carcharodon also includes relatively small fish (mackerel, sea bass), tuna, seals, fur seals, sea otters, and sea turtles. This shark does not disdain even carrion and garbage: in the stomach of one specimen, caught near Sydney, pieces of a horse, a dog and a leg of lamb were found among other food, and in another, obtained off the coast of South Africa, half a kid, two pumpkins and a bottle of woven case. The white shark is one of the most dangerous sharks for humans. There have been many cases of this shark attacking people in the water, as well as boats.

More than 100 such attacks have been documented in recent years alone, and this is undoubtedly only a small part of them. Most of the attacks were fatal, and only a few victims were lucky enough to save their lives, escaping with the loss of a limb or other severe injuries. White shark attacks have been noted not only in open waters, but also near the coast - in bays and on beaches. No wonder in Australia this shark is called the "white death". It is assumed that attacks on humans are made only by individual "stray" individuals of this species. So, in 1916, off the Atlantic coast of America (New Jersey), for 12 days, five people were attacked by a shark near the shore. Of these, only one survived. After the white shark was caught in the area, the attacks stopped.

Scientific Classification

Kingdom: Animals
Type: Chordates
Class: Cartilaginous fish
Superorder: Sharks
Order: Lamniformes
Family: Herring sharks (Lamnidae)
Genus: White sharks (Carcharodon)

Photo: Kurzon, Brocken Inaglory, Hein waschefort

Origin

The great white shark (lat. Carcharodon carcharias) - also known as the white shark, white death, man-eating shark, carcharodon - is an exceptionally large predatory fish found in the surface coastal waters of all the oceans of the Earth, except for the Arctic.

Great white shark This predator owes its name to the white color of the abdominal part of the body, a broken border on the sides separated from the dark back.

Reaching a length of over 7 meters and a mass of over 3000 kg, the great white shark is the largest modern predatory fish (not counting the plankton-eating whale and giant sharks).

In addition to its very large size, the great white shark has also gained the notorious fame of a merciless cannibal due to the numerous attacks on swimmers, divers and surfers that have taken place. The chances of surviving an attack by a man-eating shark in a person are much less than under the wheels of a truck. A powerful movable body, a huge mouth armed with sharp teeth and a passion for satisfying the hunger of this predator will not leave the victim hope of salvation if the shark is determined to profit from human flesh.

The great white shark is the only surviving species of its genus Carcharodon. It is on the verge of extinction - there are only about 3,500 of them left on Earth.

The first scientific name, Squalus carcharias, was given to the great white shark by Carl Linnaeus in 1758. Zoologist E. Smith in 1833 assigned the generic name Carcharodon (Greek karcharos sharp + Greek odous - tooth). The final modern scientific name of the species was formed in 1873, when the Linnaean specific name was combined with the genus name under one term - Carcharodon carcharias.

The great white belongs to the family of herring sharks (Lamnidae), which includes four more species of marine predators: the mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus), the longfin mako shark (Longfin mako), the Pacific salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) and the Atlantic herring shark (Lamna nasus).

The similarity in the structure and shape of the teeth, as well as the large size of the great white shark and the prehistoric megalodon, led to the fact that most scientists considered them to be closely related species. This assumption is reflected in the scientific name of the latter - Carcharodon megalodon.

At present, some scientists express doubts about the close relationship of carcharadon and megalodon, considering them to be distant relatives belonging to the family of herring sharks, but not so closely related. Recent studies suggest that the white shark is closer to the mako shark than to the megalodon. According to the theory put forward, the true ancestor of the great white shark is Isurus hastalis, while megalodons are directly related to sharks of the Carcharocle species. According to the same theory, Otodus obliquus is considered a representative of the ancient extinct branch of Carcharocles, megalodon olnius.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photos: Hermanus Backpackers, Pedro Szekely, Brocken Inaglory

Distribution and habitats

The great white shark lives around the world in the coastal waters of the continental shelf, the temperature of which is from 12 to 24 degrees C. In colder waters, great white sharks are almost never found. They do not live in desalinated and low-salt seas either. So, for example, they were not met in our Black Sea, which is too fresh for them. In addition, there is not enough food in the Black Sea for such a large predator as the great white shark.

Habitat of the great white shark

The habitat of the great white shark covers many coastal waters of the warm and temperate seas of the World Ocean. The above map shows that it can be found anywhere in the middle belt of the planet's oceans, except, of course, the Arctic. In the south, they are not found further than the southern coast of Australia and the coast of South Africa. The most likely to meet great white sharks off the coast of California, near the Mexican island of Guadeloupe. Separate populations live in the central part of the Mediterranean and Adriatic Sea (Italy, Croatia), off the coast of New Zealand, where they are protected species. Great white sharks often swim in small flocks.

One of the most significant populations has chosen Dyer Island (South Africa), which is the site of numerous scientific studies of this species of sharks. Relatively often, great white sharks are found in the Caribbean, off the coast of Mauritius, Madagascar, Kenya and near the Seychelles. Large populations have survived off the coast of California, Australia and New Zealand.

Carcharodons are epipelagic fish, their appearance is usually observed and recorded in coastal waters of the seas, abounding in such prey as fur seals, sea lions, whales, where other sharks and large bony fish live. The great white shark is nicknamed the mistress of the ocean, as no one can compare with it in terms of the power of attacks among other fish and sea inhabitants. Only a large killer whale terrifies the carcharodon. Great white sharks are capable of long-distance migrations and can dive to considerable depths: these sharks have been recorded at a depth of almost 1300 m.

Recent studies have shown that the great white shark migrates between Baja California (Mexico) and a place near Hawaii known as the White Shark Cafe, where they spend at least 100 days a year before migrating back to Baja California. Along the way, they swim slowly and dive to a depth of about 900 m. After arriving at the coast, they change their behavior. Dives are reduced to 300 m and last up to 10 minutes.

A great white shark tagged off the coast of South Africa has shown migration routes to and from the southern coast of Australia that it makes every year. The researchers found that the great white shark swims this route in less than 9 months. The entire length of the migration route is about 20 thousand km in both directions.

These studies disproved traditional theories that considered the great white shark to be an exclusively coastal predator.

Interactions have been established between different white shark populations, which were previously considered separate from each other. The purposes and reasons why the white shark migrates are still unknown. There are suggestions that migrations are due to the seasonal nature of hunting or mating games.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photo: Joachim Huber

Anatomy and appearance

The body of a great white shark is spindle-shaped, streamlined. A large, conical head with medium-sized eyes and a pair of nostrils located on it, to which small grooves lead, increasing the flow of water to the shark's olfactory receptors. The number of teeth in a great white shark, like in a tiger, 280-300. They are arranged in several rows (usually 5). The coloration of the body of great white sharks is typical for fish swimming in the water column. The ventral side is lighter, usually dirty white, the dorsal side is darker - gray, with shades of blue, brown or green tones. A large and fleshy dorsal fin, two pectoral and anal are located on the body of a great white shark in the usual places for sharks. The plumage ends with a large caudal fin, both lobes of which, like all salmon sharks, are the same size.

Dimensions

The usual size of an adult great white shark is 4-5.2 meters with a weight of 700 - 1000 kg. Females are usually larger than males. The maximum size of a white shark is about 8 m and weighs over 3500 kg. It should be noted that the maximum size of the white shark is a hotly debated topic. Some zoologists, experts in sharks, believe that the great white shark can reach significant sizes - more than 10 and even 12 meters in length.

Among the features of the anatomical structure, it should be noted the highly developed circulatory system of great white sharks, which allows you to warm up the muscles, due to which the high mobility of the shark in the water is achieved. Like all sharks, the great white lacks a swim bladder, which means they have to keep moving to keep from drowning. Although, it should be noted that the sharks do not feel much inconvenience from this. For millions of years they did without a bubble and did not suffer from it at all.

The great white shark is the only surviving species of its genus Carcharodon. It is on the verge of extinction. The white shark is an orderly and a regulator of the number of other organisms.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photo: Joachim Huber, Brocken Inaglory, Silvestre

Nutrition

Great white sharks are carnivores and feed mainly on fish (including rays, tuna and smaller sharks), dolphins, whale carcasses and pinnipeds such as seals, fur seals and sea lions, and occasionally sea turtles. At times they attack sea otters and attack penguins, although this happens very rarely. It is also known that these sharks are not able to digest food. Most of the diet of the four-meter white shark is made up of mammals. These sharks prefer prey that is high in energy-rich fat. Shark researcher Peter Klimley used seal, pig and sheep carcasses as bait in his experiments. The sharks attacked all three baits, but the sheep carcass was rejected.

The great white shark is that predator, for which only a person poses a real threat. While the white shark's diet overlaps with that of killer whales, they do not compete directly. However, in one famous incident, a female killer whale killed an immature white shark, after which her calf feasted on shark liver. Small herds of dolphins are capable of killing a great white shark through a mob attack in which the dolphins ram the shark.

The reputation of great white sharks as ferocious predators is well deserved, but they are by no means promiscuous eaters (as was once thought). The technique of hunting "from an ambush", when the shark attacks prey from below, is typical for them. Near the now famous Seal Island, in South Africa's False Bay, studies have shown that shark attacks most often occur in the morning, within two hours of sunrise. The reason for this is that at this time it is very difficult to spot a shark near the bottom. The attack success rate is 55% in the first 2 hours, it drops to 40% late in the morning and then the sharks stop hunting.

The hunting technique of the white shark varies depending on the species it preys on. When hunting seals near South Africa, the great white shark ambushes from below and at high speed strikes the seal in the middle of the body. They move so fast that they actually float out of the water. After an unsuccessful attack, she may continue to pursue her prey. As a rule, the attack occurs on the surface of the water.

When hunting northern elephant seals near California, the great white shark immobilizes its prey by biting the hindquarters (which is the elephant seal's main source of movement) and then waits until the prey bleeds to death. This technique is usually used when hunting adults, which can be larger than a shark and are potentially dangerous opponents.

When hunting dolphins, white sharks attack them from above, from behind, or from below to avoid detection with the echolocation that dolphins use.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photos: Godot13, Hector Ibarra, Brocken Inaglory

Behavior

The behavior and social position of the white shark is not well understood, but a recent study suggests that white sharks are more social than previously thought. In South Africa, white sharks appear to have a dominance hierarchy based on size, sex, and privilege. Females dominate males, big sharks dominate smaller sharks, and longtime residents over newcomers. When hunting, white sharks tend to observe a large interval between each other, and resolve all conflict situations among themselves by resorting to ritual representations. They rarely resort to biting during these battles, although some individuals have been found to have bite marks left by other white sharks. It can be assumed that when someone invades their personal space, the great white shark inflicts a warning bite on the intruder. Some experts think that the white shark inflicts sparing bites on other individuals, thus demonstrating to them its superiority.

The great white shark is one of several shark species that regularly raise their head higher.
sea ​​surface to gaze at other objects such as prey. This behavior has also been seen in at least one group of reef sharks, but in this case it may have been due to human interest (sharks are better at picking up scents this way, as they move faster through air than through water). Sharks are very curious animals and can show a high degree of intelligence and
individuality when conditions permit.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photo: Brocken Inaglory, LASZLO ILYES, Sharkdiver.com

reproduction

Any living being strives to produce offspring similar to itself, which will continue the existence of a species, genus, family and will not allow this family chain to disappear in the ruthless battle of evolutionary selection. Each generation, according to Charles Darwin's theory, is endowed with more and more reliable survival mechanisms. For many millions of years, sharks, without a second's respite, have defended their right to exist in the seas of our planet. So far, they have done well and are succeeding. What is the mechanism of reproduction of their own kind in these amazing fish?

Sharks, like all cartilaginous fish, reproduce by internal fertilization, when the male reproductive products are introduced into the female's body and fertilize her reproductive products. However, in different species of sharks, the process of reproduction may differ, first of all, in the way the offspring appear from the mother's egg. There are oviparous, ovoviviparous and viviparous sharks.

Oviparous sharks reproduce with eggs enclosed in a hard, sometimes covered with outgrowths, protein shell, on top of which there is usually a horny protective layer. Oviparous polar shark The shell on the eggs is formed during the passage through the oviduct through the albuminous and shell glands of the female. It protects the embryo from dehydration, being eaten by predators, mechanical damage and allows hanging groups of egg clutches on algae. Eggs of ovoviviparous sharks are large and contain a lot of nutritious yolk. Usually from 1-2 to 10-12 eggs are laid at the same time, and only the polar shark lays up to 500 large eggs at a time, resembling goose eggs, about 8 cm long. Polar shark eggs are not enclosed in a cornea, unlike eggs of other oviparous species sharks The embryonic development of the embryos is slow, but the hatched baby shark differs from the adult only in size and is capable of independent life.

More than 30 percent of the species of all known sharks are oviparous. These are mainly benthic representatives of the shark tribe that live off the coast, although there are exceptions (polar shark). The method of reproduction of sharks by oviposition is similar to the reproduction of many reptiles and even birds.

In ovoviviparous sharks, which include most modern species (more than half), the egg develops in the body of the female. There is also the hatching of offspring. This process can be imagined as the birth of a fry from an egg that did not have time to leave the body of the female. At the same time, the cubs hatch and stay inside the mother for some time, being born as a result well developed and adapted for independent existence. In some species of sharks, after using their yolk sac, the cubs eat unfertilized eggs accumulated in the uterus and even eggs from which their brothers and sisters did not have time to hatch. This phenomenon is called "intrauterine cannibalism". Such "cannibals" include sand, herring and some other types of sharks. As a result of such intrauterine selection, the strongest and most developed cubs are born, although their total number in the litter is not large.

A pair of sharks Scientists have not precisely determined the term for bearing offspring in ovoviviparous species of sharks. It is believed that it ranges from several months to 2 years (katran), which is one of the longest gestation periods among all vertebrates.

Apparently, the method of reproduction of offspring by ovoviviparity is, in a rough idea, the transition from reproduction by eggs to live birth. Although, it is quite possible that nature provided just such a mechanism of reproduction for some animal species, however, it did not receive further development in the course of evolutionary revision. However, the method of reproduction of offspring by ovoviviparity in sharks and rays has existed for many millions of years and is still used, i.e. is a fairly reliable mechanism of reproduction.

The types of sharks that breed by ovoviviparity include, for example, a giant shark, which once every two years brings 1–2 offspring 1.5–2 meters each, a tiger shark, which annually gives birth to up to 50 sharks. This is apparently the highest fecundity among ovoviviparous sharks.

During a live birth, an embryo develops in the body of the female, which receives nourishment from the mother's circulatory system. The yolk sac, after using the yolk, adheres to the wall of the female's uterus, forming a kind of placenta, and the embryo receives oxygen and nutrients from the mother's bloodstream by osmosis and diffusion. This method of reproduction already corresponds to the method of reproduction of higher animal organisms. There are intermediate options between ovoviviparity and live birth.

Slightly more than 10 percent of the existing shark species reproduce by live birth. These include frilled, blue, some species of hammerhead, mustelid, sawtooth and many species of gray sharks. So, for example, the litter of a female frilled shark can have from 3 to 12 cubs, in the blue and hammerheads their number can reach up to three dozen, in the long-finned oceanic - does not exceed ten.

Males have paired testes, which are suspended in the region of the liver on special stretch marks - mesentery. The ducts of the seminiferous tubules of the testes (vas deferens) lie in the mesentery and flow into the renal tubules of the anterior narrow part of the kidney. This part of the kidney does not function as an excretory organ, but is turned into an appendage of the testis. The tubules of the testes of the male shark open into the so-called Wolffian canal, which functions like a vas deferens. In the rearmost part of the vas deferens in mature males, an extension is formed - the seminal vesicle.

The vas deferens of the right and left sides of the body of the male open into the cavity of the urogenital papilla. Next to them, openings of thin-walled hollow outgrowths - seed sacs - also open there. These are the remains of the so-called Müller channels. The ureters also drain into the cavity of the urogenital papilla. The urogenital papilla, with a hole at its apex, opens into the cavity of the cloaca. The formation of male germ cells occurs in the tubules of the testis. Not yet ripened spermatozoa through the seminiferous tubules enter the epididymis of the testis - the anterior part of the kidney - and ripen in its tubules. Mature spermatozoa pass through the vas deferens and accumulate in the seminal vesicles and seminal sacs. When the muscles of the walls of the seminal vesicles and sacs contract, the spermatozoa are squeezed out into the cloaca of the male, and then, with the help of copulatory organs (pterygopodia), they are introduced into the cloaca of the female. Pterygopodia are formed from the rays of the ventral fins of the male; females do not have these formations.

The genital and urinary tracts of females are separated throughout. Females have paired ovaries, which are located in the body of the shark in much the same way as the testes in males. In immature females, the ovaries even resemble the testes of males in appearance.

The Wolff canal in females performs only the function of the ureter. Müllerian canals are laid on the abdominal surface of the corresponding kidney. In most sharks, the anterior ends of the Müllerian canals, which function as oviducts in females, go around the anterior end of the liver and, merging, form a common funnel of the oviduct, which lies at the ventral surface of the central lobe of the liver and has wide fringed edges. In some shark species, each female oviduct ends in a funnel. In the region of the anterior part of the kidneys, each oviduct forms an extension - the shell gland, which is highly developed only in sexually mature individuals. The enlarged posterior portion of the female's oviduct is called the "womb". The oviducts of the right and left sides open into the cloaca with independent openings on the sides of the urinary papilla.

It should be noted some, unpleasant for the female, moment of the process of mating with the male in many species of sharks. Literally male. rapes the female, cruelly holding her during mating with her teeth by the fins and other parts of the body. From such "love caresses" on the body and fins of female sharks, scars and numerous injuries often remain.

Internal fertilization, inherent in all sharks. Large eggs with significant reserves of nutrients and strong shells, ovoviviparity and live birth in many shark species sharply reduce the embryonic and postembryonic mortality of offspring. This is very important, because sharks cannot be as careless about reproduction as most bony fish, which breed by laying thousands and even millions (moonfish) of eggs. However, most parent sharks cannot be called caring "ancestors" - newborn sharks who did not have time to hide in time can be eaten with pleasure by a hungry mother.

Interestingly, in some species of sharks, cases of parthenogenesis were noted, when the female gave birth to offspring without the participation of the male. Apparently, this is a kind of protective mechanism against the extinction of the species due to reproduction without the participation of males.

Similar cases have been reported in some aquariums, i.e. while keeping the female in captivity.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photo: LASZLO ILYES, Albert Kok, Dr. Dwayne Meadows

Relationship with people

One of the most dangerous inhabitants of the seas and oceans is the white shark, the video of which is available on the site. The powerful jaws of Carcharodon are armed with sharp triangular teeth. Hard fangs can not only tear flesh, but also crush strong bones.

It is not surprising that this predator can handle not only fish and squid, but also such strong animals as seals and seals. The attacking white shark inflicts a smashing bite, and then, shaking its head from side to side, tries to cause the victim as severe wounds as possible.

Thus, she completely demoralizes her prey, suppressing her will to resist. At the same time, the hunter does not forget about caution and her own safety. When attacking a seal, the shark rolls its eyes to protect them from sharp claws. If the opponent is especially strong, then the carcharodon can release prey after the first powerful bite and wait until the victim is exhausted from blood loss.

Such tactics help the white shark to successfully hunt pinnipeds. Interestingly, young predators learn mainly from their own experience. First, they attack the seals horizontally, but then they realize that it is better to deliver a decisive blow from below. In this case, the cat is much less likely to escape from danger.

The coloring of the Carcharodon helps it to successfully disguise itself before the throw. The great white shark in the video footage of the hunt for sea lions appears completely unexpectedly, jumping several meters out of the water and at the same time capturing the prey with its powerful jaws.

It seems that the seal has no chance of survival at all. However, in reality this is not the case. If a potential victim has noticed an attacking predator in time, it can escape from the attack into the "dead zone" above the dorsal fins of the shark. In this case, the missed Carcharodon loses sight of the prey for a while, and the prey has the opportunity to escape.

Why is the white shark a very dangerous predator?

The white shark is not only the largest, but also one of the fastest among all its close and distant relatives. It develops high speed of movement not only due to its streamlined spindle-shaped body and powerful fins.

A special network of blood vessels allows you to oxygenate the muscles as efficiently as possible. Due to this, at short distances Carcharodon can develop a particularly high speed. However, such jerks require a lot of energy, which requires fatty and high-calorie foods to replenish.

Therefore, it cannot be said that a person is of any gastronomic interest for the great white shark. Typically, Carcharodon attacks on humans are either accidental or provoked.

We can watch a great white shark attacking a caged cameraman in the video. Although the structure is intended for protection, however, with powerful blows of a predator on the bars of the lattice, the scuba diver feels very uncomfortable. But it wasn't the shark that came to the beach, it was the observers with their cage, equipment and baits who invaded the underwater world.

Of course, large selachia are dangerous predators. And the most formidable of them is the white shark, which has a reputation as a man-eating shark. However, in their usual habitat, these predators do not intersect with humans in any way. The white shark gained its sad popularity primarily thanks to horror films, where it is presented as a ruthless bloodthirsty killer.
White sharks and relationships with people

Documentaries filmed in recent years show that this is not at all the case. The white sharks in the video lead a normal daily life, preying mainly on fish and pinnipeds.

If people invade their habitat, then the reaction of predators depends primarily on human behavior. In the video footage, you can see how white sharks react peacefully to scuba divers who behave respectfully towards them.

Photo White shark (click to enlarge):

Photo: Dr. Dwayne Meadows, Dr. Dwayne Meadows 

The great white shark is known to many as the man-eating shark, or carcharodon. This animal belongs to the class of cartilaginous fish and the herring shark family. Today, the population of this species slightly exceeds three thousand individuals, so the great white shark belongs to the category of predatory animals that are on the verge of extinction.

Description and characteristics of the white shark

The length of the largest of all modern predatory sharks is eleven meters or a little more. The most common are individuals with a body length of not more than six meters, and a mass in the range of 650-3000 kg. The back and sides of the white shark have a characteristic gray coloration with slight brownish or black tones. The surface of the ventral part is off-white.

This is interesting! It is known that white sharks existed relatively recently, the body length of which could reach thirty meters. In the mouth of such an individual, living at the end of the Tertiary period, eight adults could freely settle down.

Modern white sharks lead a predominantly solitary lifestyle. Adults can be found not only in the waters of the open ocean, but also along the coastline. As a rule, the shark tries to stay close to the surface, and prefers warm or moderately warm ocean waters. Prey is destroyed by the white shark with the help of very large and wide, triangular teeth. All teeth have jagged edges. Very powerful jaws allow the aquatic predator to bite through not only cartilaginous tissues, but also rather large bones of its prey without much effort. Hungry white sharks are not particularly picky about their food choices.

Features of the morphology of the white shark:

  • a large cone-shaped head has a pair of eyes, a pair of nostrils and a fairly large mouth;
  • small grooves are located around the nostrils, which increase the speed of water inflow and improve the predator's sense of smell;
  • pressure indicators of large jaws reach eighteen thousand newtons;
  • teeth arranged in five rows change regularly, but their total number varies within three hundred;
  • five gill slits are located behind the predator's head;
  • two large pectoral fins and a fleshy anterior dorsal fin. They are supplemented by relatively small second dorsal, ventral and anal fins;
  • the fin located in the tail section is large;
  • the circulatory system of a predator is well developed and is able to quickly heat up muscle tissues, increasing the speed of movement and improving the mobility of a large body.

This is interesting! The great white shark does not have a swim bladder, therefore it has negative buoyancy, and to prevent sinking to the bottom, the fish must constantly make swimming movements.

A feature of the species is the unusual structure of the eyes, which allows the predator to see prey even in the dark. A special organ of the shark is the lateral line, thanks to which the slightest disturbance of the water is captured even at a distance of one hundred meters or more.

Habitat and distribution in nature

The white shark is found in many coastal waters of the oceans.. This predator is found almost everywhere, except for the Arctic Ocean and beyond the southern coast of Australia and South Africa.

The largest number of individuals hunt in the coastal zone of California, as well as in close proximity to the island of Guadeloupe in Mexico. Also, a small population of the great white shark lives near Italy and Croatia, and off the New Zealand coastline. Here, small flocks are classified as protected species.

A significant number of white sharks have chosen the waters near Dyer Island, which has allowed scientists to successfully conduct numerous scientific studies. Also, fairly large populations of great white sharks were found near the following areas:

  • Mauritius;
  • Madagascar;
  • Kenya;
  • Seychelles;
  • Australia;
  • New Zealand.

In general, the predator is relatively unpretentious in its habitat, so migration is focused on areas with the largest number of prey and optimal conditions for reproduction. Epipelagic fish are able to choose coastal marine areas with a large number of fur seals, sea lions, whales and other species of small sharks or large bony fish. Only very large killer whales are capable of resisting this "mistress" of the ocean space.

Lifestyle and behavioral features

The nature of the behavior and social structure of white sharks has not been sufficiently studied at present. It is known for certain that the population living in the waters close to South Africa is characterized by hierarchical dominance in accordance with sex, size and residence of individuals. The dominance of females over males prevails, and the largest individuals over smaller sharks. Conflict situations in the process of hunting are resolved by rituals or demonstrative behavior. Fights between individuals of the same population are certainly possible, but are quite rare. As a rule, sharks of this species in conflicts are limited to not too strong, warning bites.

A distinctive feature of the white shark is the ability to periodically raise its head above the water surface in the process of hunting and searching for prey. According to scientists, in this way the shark manages to capture smells well even at a considerable distance.

This is interesting! Predators enter the waters of the coastal zone, as a rule, in stable or long-established groups, including from two to six individuals, which is similar to a wolf pack. Each such group has a so-called alpha leader, and the rest of the individuals within the "pack" have a clearly defined status in accordance with the hierarchy.

Great white sharks are distinguished by fairly well-developed mental abilities and ingenuity, which allows them to find food in almost any, even the most difficult conditions.

Feeding an aquatic predator

Young carcharadons, as the main diet, use medium-sized bony fish, small-sized marine animals and medium-sized mammals. Sufficiently grown and fully formed great white sharks expand their diet at the expense of larger prey, which can be seals, sea lions, and also large fish. Adult carcharadons will not refuse such prey as smaller species of sharks, cephalopods and other most nutritious marine life.

For successful hunting, great white sharks use a peculiar body color. but. The light coloring makes the shark almost invisible among underwater rocky places, which makes it very easy for it to track down its prey. Especially interesting is the moment of the attack of the great white shark. Due to the high body temperature, the predator is able to develop quite a decent speed, and good strategic abilities allow carcharadons to use win-win tactics when hunting aquatic inhabitants.

Important! With a massive body, very powerful jaws and sharp teeth, the great white shark has almost no competitors among aquatic predators and is capable of hunting almost any prey.

The main food addictions of the great white shark are represented by seals and other marine animals, including dolphins and small species of whales. Eating a significant amount of fatty foods allows this predator to maintain an optimal energy balance. The heating of muscle mass by the circulatory system requires a diet represented by high-calorie foods.

Of particular interest is the carcharodon seal hunting. Gliding horizontally in the water column, the white shark pretends not to notice the animal floating on the surface, but as soon as the seal loses its vigilance, the shark attacks the prey, jumping out of the water abruptly and almost with lightning speed. When hunting for, the great white shark ambushes and attacks from behind, which does not allow the dolphin to use its unique ability - echolocation.