Killer whales feast on the livers of great white sharks - just one orca sighting can keep the sharks away for a year
- Great white sharks are often thought of as the most fearsome predators in the ocean.
- But even these sharks are afraid of something. A new study shows that when great whites have encountered killer whales near their hunting grounds, they've fled and stayed away.
- In 2017, there were three reports of orca whales killing great white sharks off the coast of South Africa and eating their livers.
Who's afraid of the big, bad ... whale?
The lovable orca whale of "Free Willy" fame, also called a killer whale or blackfish, is a stone-cold predator. So much so, in fact, that it can send the world's most-feared shark into hiding.
According to a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports, the mere presence of orcas in the water leads to a noticeable absence of great white sharks.
The researchers behind the study monitored the Pacific Ocean waters off the Farallon Islands near San Francisco, where great whites are known to hunt for elephant seals. If a pod of orcas comes along, the study authors found, the sharks flee their preferred hunting grounds and don't come back until the following year.
"It's a bit ironic - when we think about white sharks, it's hard to imagine they are risk averse," Salvador Jorgensen, a shark expert at the Monterey Bay Aquarium and the lead author of the study, told Business Insider. "But this study shows that even for these massive predators, knowing when to pull out and flee is an important part of their repertoire."
When confronted with orcas, sharks hightail it
Between September and December each year, great white sharks congregate in California's Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary off the coast of San Francisco to dine on young elephant seals.
To keep tabs on these sharks' movements, Jorgensen and his colleagues attached tracker tags to 165 great white sharks between 2006 and 2013.
The researchers then compiled population data and field observations from the area between 1987 and 2013 so they could cross-reference how the behavior of elephant seals, sea lions, and orcas might have impacted shark movements over time.
According to their data, killer whales - who also enjoy an elephant seal dinner - showed up in the area only rarely during hunting season: They were seen on just 18 days of the entire 27-year span of observations. Sometimes, the orcas were around for less than an hour.
But that was more than enough for the sharks. During those 18 days, the study authors found, there were four observed encounters between orcas and great whites. When these two predators found themselves in the same area, data from the sharks' tracker tags showed that all of the great whites started swimming away within minutes of the orcas' arrival.
Then the sharks didn't return until the next hunting season.
Based on other observations of whale-shark interactions in California's waters, it seems great whites have good reason to flee.
Great white shark livers are an orca delicacy
In 1997, whale watchers near the Farallon Islands observed an orca attacking and killing a great white shark. Then in 2016, a drone captured a great white being ripped apart by an orca in Monterey Bay.
Orcas have killed great white sharks in other parts of the world, too, Jorgensen said.
"Recent reports from South Africa and Australia suggest that the relationship between these two ocean giants may have a long legacy, perhaps spanning millennia," he said.
The most notable clash of these marine titans came two years ago in South Africa, when researchers found three great white sharks washed up on the shores of Kleinbaai. The sharks' livers were missing, as was one shark's heart.
Scientists determined that all three had run afoul of orca whales, which had dined on their nutrient-rich livers. The authors of the new study suggest that consumption of great whites' highly caloric livers could give killer whales an energy boost.
Ultimately, the authors aren't sure whether the orcas passing by the Farallon Islands are targeting great white sharks for their internal organs, or whether the whales are just bullying their competition out of the prime spot at the elephant seal drive-in.
Orcas are bigger, badder, and better hunters
Great white sharks can grow to be 20 feet long and weigh 4 tons. They can swim up to about 35 miles per hour and use their superior sense of smell to hone in on prey from up to 2 miles away.
Read More: An 18-foot great white shark ate a dead whale in front of a boat full of tourists
The sharks' mouths hold 300 serrated, perpetually self-replacing teeth. When hunting, they like to position themselves below unsuspecting prey in the water, then rocket towards the surface and chomp down. Great whites can leap up to 10 feet out of the water, breaching like a whale, before sinking below the waves with their catch.
That all sounds scary - until you compare it to orcas.
Killer whales swim just as fast as great whites. But they're bigger, reaching lengths of 32 feet and weighing up to 6 tons. The whales also hunt cooperatively in pods of up to 40 individuals, herding and encircling prey then using their 4-inch teeth to chomp on other whales, otters, seals, and penguins. According to Sea World, blackfish prey on more than 140 species of animals around the world, including land-based critters like moose.
Orcas are even known to purposefully beach themselves on icebergs or sandbars to frighten seals and penguins into the water, then track them down and swallow them whole.
Ironically, the outcome of the predator face-off near the Farallon Islands favored the elephant seals.
The researchers noted that sharks hunted about 40 elephant seals in the area each hunting season. But those hunts stopped as soon as orcas arrived on the scene. So during the years that the great whites left prematurely, elephant seals were attacked and eaten about 75% less often.