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Two Orcas in South Africa Are Hunting Great White Sharks and Eating Their Livers, Research Finds

Orca whales hunting great white sharks
Orca whales hunting great white sharks

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Two orcas whales are hunting and eating great white sharks, according to new research.

A recent article in African Journal of Marine Science focuses on two killer whales researchers have discovered that hunt great white sharks off the coast of South Africa. The whale pair's appetite for great whites has sent the sharks fleeing out of the area.

"Initially, following an orca attack in Gansbaai, individual great white sharks did not appear for weeks or months," the article's lead author, Alison Towner, told SWNS.

"It mirrors what we see used by wild dogs in the Serengeti in Tanzania in response to increased lion presence," she added. "The more the orcas frequent these sites, the longer the great white sharks stay away."

According to the article's findings, since 2017, eight great white sharks have washed up dead on South African shores with identifiable orca bite marks.

Seven of those sharks had their livers removed by the whales during the attack, and some of them had their hearts removed too. All of the dead sharks found had distinctive wounds traced to the same pair of killer whales.

EMBARGOED YUNTIL THURSDAY 00.01BST/19.01ET Lead author Alison Towner with the carcass of a Great White Shark, washed up on shore following an Orca attack. See SWNS story SWNNorcas. Orcas are hunting and eating Great White sharks... ripping open their torsos for livers and hearts. The killer whales are terrorising them off the coast of South Africa - driving populations out of the area.It's the first time the gruesome attacks have been recorded - shedding fresh light on marine ecosystems.Lead author Alison Towner said: "Initially, following an orca attack in Gansbaai, individual Great White sharks did not appear for weeks or months.

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Researchers believe the orcas have killed more than the eight great whites found washed up on shore and that other killer whales are capable of similar attacks.

Orcas are the iconic great white shark's only predator — apart from humans. The whales can reach up to 30 feet in length and weigh over six tons — feeding on fish, squid, seals, and sea birds. Great whites can reach up to 22 feet long and weigh around 2.5 tons.

Towner, a Ph.D. student at Rhodes University in Makhanda, South Africa, said that this research "is particularly important" because it determines "how large marine predators respond to risk."

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She added that the research can also help scientists understand the "dynamics of coexistence" between "other predator communities."

Towner's recently published study used long-term sightings and tagging data to show that the two orcas have scared great whites away from South Africa's Gansbaai coast, which the sharks dominated for years. Located 60 miles east of Cape Town, Gansbaai was known for great white sightings.

Towner, a senior biologist at the Dyer Island Conservation Trust off the southern tip of Africa, lives in Gansbaai and has witnessed firsthand how the two shark-hunting orcas have driven great whites out of the area and changed the sea's ecosystem.

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"It's triggered the emergence of a new mesopredator to the area, the bronze whaler shark, which is known to be eaten by the great white shark," she explained.

"Balance is crucial in marine ecosystems. For example, with no great white sharks restricting Cape fur seal behavior, the seals can predate on critically endangered African penguins or compete for the small pelagic fish they eat," Towner added.