A rarely seen megamouth shark (Megachasma pelagios) was recently spotted in east Africa for the very first time. It was recorded in a market in Zanzibar, where it was being sold after being captured and killed. The recent sighting was only the sixth time a megamouth had ever been found off the coast of Africa. Marine biologist Rhett H. Bennett of the Wildlife Conservation Society explains the implications of the find.
Officially the megamouth has been recorded to reach 7 meters in length, slightly larger than a great white shark (which can reach 6.4m). However, most megamouth sharks recorded to date have been less than about 5.5m long. This is about the length of a tiger shark or the height of an adult giraffe.
People may confuse the megamouth shark with the megalodon, the big, prehistoric shark species that was said to be so much bigger than any other shark. But the megamouth is a gentle giant, with no large, sharp teeth. It cruises around quietly, similar to a whale shark.
It is not a top predator that feeds on tuna fish or marine mammals, but rather a filter feeder that feeds on plankton, and is the smallest of only three shark species in the world that are filter feeders. Megamouth sharks are hardly ever seen, which suggests it is likely a solitary type of animal.
It was sad to see the photos of the dead animal laid out on the beach, but definitely an important new record. This was only the sixth megamouth ever seen in Africa, with one previous sighting each in South Africa, Gabon, Liberia, Senegal and Mauritania between 1995 and 2020.
As the only individual megamouth shark ever found along the east coast of Africa, this finding extends the areas of the world's oceans in which the shark is known to live, filling what used to be a gap in its otherwise near-global distribution.
My colleagues, Abdalla S. Abdulla of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Tanzania Marine Programme and David van Beuningen of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Western Indian Ocean Shark Programme, and I analyze thousands of photographs of dead sharks at landing sites, where fisheries offload what they have caught, including unwanted animals accidentally caught in their fishing gear.
We usually see the same 20 to 30 shark species over and over. So seeing the first megamouth ever in this area was a freak record — one of those rare occurrences and one of the most interesting we have had.
In time, if multiple records of megamouths occurred in the same place, scientists might want to focus some dedicated research effort in that area. However, for our research program in east Africa, we do not have the resources to pursue that in detail. We would be spending hours and hours in the ocean and might never find another megamouth. This is why it is important to share this kind of information, in order to contribute additional pieces to the megamouth puzzle.
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Anyone who comes across a megamouth shark should notify any nature conservation or government fishery department, or make contact with the Wildlife Conservation Society, or the nearest aquarium.
This edited article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.