This Could Be The First Newborn Great White Shark Ever Captured On Camera - A feel good story to brighten your day



This could be the first newborn great white shark ever captured on camera


The super rare footage from the California coast could offer more clues into how sharks spend their first days on Earth.

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In July 2023, wildlife filmmaker Carlos Gauna and University of California, Riverside biology doctoral student Phillip Sternes took footage of what could be the first newborn great white shark ever recorded.

A wildlife filmmaker and biology doctoral student have taken what could be the first picture of a newborn great white shark. The images and findings are described in a study published January 29 in the journal Environmental Biology of Fishes.

Most famous for terrorizing beachgoers in the greatly exaggerated Jaws movies, great whites are the largest predatory sharks in the world. Despite their apex predator status, fatal attacks on humans are rare. According to the Florida Museum of Natural History, humans are more than 75 times more likely to be killed by lightning than a shark. They can weigh between 1,500 and 4,000 pounds and their newborns typically feed on fish and other sharks. Even though they are fish, many sharks give birth instead of laying eggs.

On July 9, 2023, filmmaker Carlos Gauna and University of California, Riverside biology doctoral student Phillip Sternes were looking for sharks near Santa Barbara on California’s central coast. Most great whites are gray on top with white bellies, but Gauana’s drone camera showed a roughly 5-foot-long shark pup that had more white on its body than normal.


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Newborn great white shark filmed off the California coast near Santa Barbara. CREDIT: Carlos Gauna/The Malibu Artist


“We enlarged the images, put them in slow motion, and realized the white layer was being shed from the body as it was swimming,” Sternes said in a statement. “I believe it was a newborn white shark shedding its embryonic layer.”

Gauna has spent thousands of hours filming sharks all over the world and this recent observation could help solve the longstanding mystery of great white birthing habits.

“Where white sharks give birth is one of the holy grails of shark science. No one has ever been able to pinpoint where they are born, nor has anyone seen a newborn baby shark alive,” Gauna said in a statement. “There have been dead white sharks found inside deceased pregnant mothers. But nothing like this.”

While the shark may have been shedding some skin due to an unknown dermatological condition or have albinism, Gauna and Sternes do not believe that either explains the pup’s more white color. They are both co-authors of the study and believe that the shark in their footage is a newborn great white for four primary reasons.

Intrauterine milk

While great white shark pups are in utero, the embryonic sharks may eat unfertilized eggs for protein. The mothers also potentially give a milk-like substance that is secreted in the uterus as additional nourishment to the growing shark pups.

“I believe what we saw was the baby shedding the intrauterine milk,” Sternes said.

Pregnant sharks nearby

In the weeks leading up to the observations, Guana had seen large and likely pregnant great whites swimming in the vicinity.

[Related: With new tags, researchers can track sharks into the inky depths of the ocean’s Twilight Zone.]

“I filmed three very large sharks that appeared pregnant at this specific location in the days prior. On this day, one of them dove down, and not long afterwards, this fully white shark appears,” Gauna said. “It’s not a stretch to deduce where the baby came from.”

Size and shape​

The team believes that the shark’s appearance is also indicative of a newborn and not a juvenile shark. They observed a shark that was thin, shot, and rounded instead of a longer older shark. The study posits that the shark is potentially only hours to one day old at most.

Location, location, location

Scientists believe that the location off the coast of central California where the pup was observed is a potential birthing ground for great whites.

“There are a lot of hypothetical areas, but despite intense interest in these sharks, no one’s seen a birth or a newborn pup in the wild,” Sternes said. “This may well be the first evidence we have of a pup in the wild, making this a definitive birthing location.”

However, other scientists believe that great whites are born further out to sea. This pup was spotted about 1,000 feet from the beach, so it was likely born in more shallow waters. More research is needed to confirm if this area of California’s coast is a breeding ground.


 
Finally some good news.

Hopefully by learning more about where exactly Great Whites breed and give birth, we can better protect those areas and help conserve this endangered animal.
 
Bro, why do you like to see newborn creatures swimming in a pool? I'm just saying, it's a little weird, you are telling me you saw a naked being swimming and your first instinct is to grab a camera? And you said you did it for science? It doesn't add up man...

Jokes aside, I had no idea there wasn't any footage of this ever. Hopefully he'll grow up and fullfil his true purpose:
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Bro, why do you like to see newborn creatures swimming in a pool? I'm just saying, it's a little weird, you are telling me you saw a naked being swimming and your first instinct is to grab a camera? And you said you did it for science? It doesn't add up man...
Something something the album cover for Nevermind
 
He'll make for some great soup someday.
As a Chinaman I am disappointed by this stupidity.
Why bother going after an endangered species of shark when there are so many Atlantic sharpnose sharks that one can legally catch and cook?
Also, the heavy metal content is high with large sharks, so if you are a fan of cancer, then that is what you are looking for.

That's a big newborn

That's good, he will need all the size he can get in his reign of terror on Californian beaches

Al'shallah my bitey friend, al'shallah
We will feed the leftards to him when we clean up California and make it a good place once again.
He will serve as our organic trash compacter!
 
>newborn
>already 5 feet long


Oh, okay.
Wait til you find out how big mature females are.

They also take 15-30+ years to reach sexual maturity, which is part of why them being hunted for fins and shark tournaments is so devastating. They're slow growing animals that take a long time to be able to breed, and many of the sharks killed by humans were probably killed before they ever got the chance.
 
Wait til you find out how big mature females are.

They also take 15-30+ years to reach sexual maturity, which is part of why them being hunted for fins and shark tournaments is so devastating. They're slow growing animals that take a long time to be able to breed, and many of the sharks killed by humans were probably killed before they ever got the chance.
Even when they flirt with 20+ feet in length that can't be a fun birthing experience.
I expect if they had the brainpower for it a lot of Great White Shark women would wish they still laid eggs lol
 
Even when they flirt with 20+ feet in length that can't be a fun birthing experience.
I expect if they had the brainpower for it a lot of Great White Shark women would wish they still laid eggs lol
At least I assume they aren't usually having more than one pup at a time.

I wonder how long their gestation period is?
 
Here's one of the moms: she's 21 feet long and pregnant here, so you can make some guesses at the girth. There's plenty of room for at least one large baby in there.
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Incredible creatures. You have to think that the capacity for two or three five foot sharks is there. Do they eat each other upon exit, leaving only the strongest? Is the mother swimming swiftly, giving them distance from each other, and thus an escape route? Do they tend to stay close to the bottom, or head to topwaters? Ah man, so many questions. Hope they can start answering a few of them, now that we have a probable birthing ground.
 
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