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Also known as: Carcharodon carcharias, great white shark, man-eater, white death, white pointer
Also called:
great white shark or white pointer
Related Topics:
shark
charismatic megafauna
apex predator

Mating has yet to be fully documented in white sharks, but it is assumed to be similar to internal fertilization in most sharks—that is, the male inserts his claspers into the cloaca of the female. Courtship behavior, if there is any, is unknown. Male white sharks reach sexual maturity at 3.5 to 4 meters (about 11.5 to 13 feet) in length and about 10 years of age, whereas females reach sexual maturity at 4.5 to 5 metres (about 15 to 16 feet) in length and 12 to 18 years of age. Reproduction is viviparous (that is, fertilized eggs are retained within the body). Prior to birth, the young in the womb may feed on undeveloped eggs and possibly their unborn siblings. Litters consist of 2 to 10 pups; the newborns are more than 1 metre (about 3.3 feet) in length. Gestation is thought to take about 12 months, and females are assumed to give birth in warm temperate and subtropical waters, but specific nursery areas are unknown.

Ecology

Role in marine food chains

As top predators in marine food chains, white sharks have few natural enemies. While it is true that young white sharks are sometimes eaten by larger sharks (including other white sharks), they have fewer potential enemies as they grow. Adult white sharks fear few other animals; however, in at least one documented instance, an adult killer whale (Orcinus orca) attacked and killed an adult white shark. The most profound enemies of the white shark are human beings.

Conservation

The white shark has been classified as a vulnerable species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) since 1996. Its wide distribution throughout many areas of the ocean has made comprehensive population surveys difficult; however, catch-rate data collected by fishery officials worldwide suggest that the species may be undergoing a decline, but the white shark has only been assessed in selected regions, such as the Mediterranean Sea, where it is considered critically endangered.

Humans hunt white sharks for a variety of reasons. They are a good food fish, and they are caught and sold commercially in many countries. Because of their impressive size and fabled ferocity, they are also highly prized sport fish, and their teeth are often treasured as jewelry. In addition, the jaws of large individuals can fetch thousands of dollars.

Sharks of all types are also victims of finning, the practice of harvesting the lateral and dorsal fins and the lower tail fin from a shark by commercial fishing operations and others worldwide. Although the United States and several other industrialized countries have enacted laws that prohibit many shark-finning practices, white sharks continue to be hunted for their fins. In addition, many white sharks are caught accidentally in commercial fishing nets each year. Some of these sharks die in the nets; however, survivors may be killed intentionally for their fins and other parts by commercial anglers.

White sharks are widespread. However, they are not common. They fill an important niche as a top predator and may help to keep populations of marine mammals in balance. Since they are positioned at the top of the food chain, they are never abundant. As a result, the removal of a few individuals can have a profound effect on the population. Since they grow slowly and produce few young, it takes a long time for populations to rebound, and harvesting has depleted populations of these sharks in many areas. Consequently, white sharks are legally protected in several places (such as Australia, South Africa, and California) despite their bad reputation. The protection of white sharks may even have economic benefits. For example, in waters that contain white sharks, boaters and dive operators earn tens of thousands of dollars yearly by featuring popular “shark dives” where guests can see white sharks from the safety of steel cages suspended in the water. Such a change in image from wanton killer to majestic predator may assure the future survival of white sharks.

Evolution

According to the fossil record, modern white sharks evolved sometime between 10 million and 4 million years ago, from the middle of the Miocene Epoch (23 million to 5.3 million years ago) through the first half of the Pliocene Epoch (5.3 million to 2.6 million years ago), but their ancestors may date back to at least the Eocene Epoch (about 56 million to 34 million years ago). Early authorities maintained that white sharks were descended from the extinct megalodon (Carcharocles megalodon, formerly Carcharodon megalodon)—the largest shark in the fossil record and now considered to be a member of the megatooth shark family Otodontidae.

Newer paleontological interpretation is contentious, however, and two competing hypotheses have developed. In the first hypothesis, modern white sharks branched off from megatooth sharks to evolve alongside megalodon and other similar megatooth species. In contrast, the second hypothesis, based largely on 21st-century fossil finds and tooth analyses, suggests that modern white sharks descended from a line of ancient broad-toothed mako sharks—starting with Carcharodon hastalis. C. hastalis had teeth similar in size and shape to those of modern white sharks but without serrations. These first white sharks likely first appeared during the middle of the Miocene Epoch. (However, some studies suggest that they may have evolved during the Oligocene Epoch [33.9 million to 23 million years ago].) Descendent species do not appear to have branched off from C. hastalis. Instead, white sharks are thought to have gradually transitioned from C. hastalis to C. hubbelli (between 8 million and 6 million years ago) and then later to C. carcharias (that is, modern white sharks) in a single evolutionary lineage, or chronospecies. Fossil discoveries suggest that tooth serrations characteristic of modern white sharks appeared gradually in the chronospecies, showing as small serrations in C. hubbelli before becoming fully developed in C. carcharias.

Douglas Long The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica