{"id":2637528,"date":"2023-07-13T09:08:27","date_gmt":"2023-07-13T15:08:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/?p=2637528"},"modified":"2023-07-13T14:26:07","modified_gmt":"2023-07-13T20:26:07","slug":"cape-cod-white-shark-population","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/outdoor-adventure\/water-activities\/cape-cod-white-shark-population\/","title":{"rendered":"Scientists Believe Cape Cod\u2019s White Shark Population Is Big. Really Big."},"content":{"rendered":"
Greg Skomal\u2019s phone rang in late September of 2004. The caller said that a large shark, possibly a white shark<\/a>, had been marooned in a tidal salt pond on Naushon Island, just southwest of Woods Hole, Massachusetts<\/a>. Skomal, a shark expert for the Massachusetts Department of Marine Fisheries (DMF), was skeptical that it was indeed one of the feared predators, which were rarely seen in the area, but he still needed to check it out. Before leaving home, Skomal decided to bring his satellite tagging equipment, just in case. When he arrived at the pond, there was no doubt; it was a female white shark about 13 feet long, weighing approximately 1,700 pounds. Over the next two weeks, Skomal and others attempted to free the shark from the tidal pond, and their efforts generated a glut of media attention<\/a>.<\/p>\n Skomal was relieved when the shark, which he nicknamed Gretel, finally swam into open water. Before Gretel departed, Skomal affixed a tracking tag, making him the first person ever to tag a white shark in the Atlantic Ocean using satellite technology. But his elation was short-lived. \u201cAfter we released the shark, the tag detached,\u201d he says. \u201cI thought this was a career-defining opportunity, and I\u2019d messed it up.\u201d It seemed highly unlikely he\u2019d ever get another opportunity like that.<\/p>\n Nineteen years later, Skomal laughs about the ordeal. To date, he\u2019s now tagged more than 300 white sharks in the shallow waters off Cape Cod, which in recent years has seen these apex predators appear in increasingly large numbers. In a new study of the white sharks of Cape Cod, Megan Winton, a staff scientist with the non-profit research group Atlantic White Shark Conservancy<\/a>, and Skomal estimate that 800 white sharks visited the shallow waters along the Cape’s eastern shoreline between June and October, from 2015 to 2018. This eye-popping number makes Cape Cod\u2019s eastern shoreline arguably the largest seasonal meeting point on the planet for white sharks.<\/p>\n The migratory nature of white sharks makes apples-to-apples comparisons tricky, but a 2013 study of sharks off South Africa\u2014a well-known destination for the animals\u2014pegged the estimated population at 908 individuals, but that study implied a much larger geographic range than the Cape Cod study. A 2021 study of sharks off the California coast<\/a> estimated there to be 300 white sharks swimming off the state\u2019s central coast, a region stretching from Bodega Bay in the north to Monterey Bay in the south, and including the Farallon Islands<\/a>.<\/p>\n White sharks likely swam off the coast of Cape Cod hundreds of years ago. The current growth of the region\u2019s white shark population traces its roots in the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, which prohibited the killing of seals and other mammals along the coastline. Prior to that, gray seals had been hunted nearly to extinction in New England waters. When the seal population dropped, sharks likely sought food elsewhere. But the seals maintained a remnant population in Canadian waters, and by the 1990s were expanding their numbers and range southward, establishing several pupping colonies around the Cape and Islands.<\/p>\n These fat-rich pinnipeds are a favorite quarry of white sharks, and the mammals\u2019 return meant the sharks weren\u2019t far behind. By the late 2000s, credible reports of white sharks near Cape Cod were on the uptick. As Skomal tells it, \u201cWe were getting more reports each summer of dead seals on the beach with wounds that could only be attributed to white sharks. In 2009, I got a call from a spotter pilot who saw white sharks off the Outer Cape,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n What researchers find noteworthy about the Cape Cod population is how quickly it has grown. Dr. Chris Lowe, director of the Shark Lab at California State University, Long Beach, who did not participate in this study, told me that many marine scientists were initially quite conservative about the Cape Cod shark count. \u201cWhat I find most amazing is the speed at which the population recovered,\u201d he said. \u201cMan, were we wrong.\u201d<\/p>\n Marine scientists weren\u2019t the only ones surprised\u2014recreational fishers, beachgoers, and water sports enthusiasts have all had to rethink their relationships with the water due to the uptick in sharks. John Murphy, a local surfer and former lifeguard, grew up on the Cape and has surfed there since the early 90s. \u201cI could have imagined aliens coming down from Outer Space more than I could have imagined pulling someone out of the water from a shark attack,\u201d he told me. It just wasn\u2019t something people worried about. But that all changed. It went from \u201cthe last thing you think about to the first thing you think about when you put on your wetsuit.\u201d<\/p>\n Ground zero for reported shark activity was the Cape Cod National Seashore (CCNS), which spans 45 miles of coastline and hosts over a million beachgoers each year. The first reported incidence of a white shark biting a human on Cape Cod occurred in 2012 on Ballston Beach near the town of Truro, where a 50-year-old man was bitten while swimming 400 to 500 feet offshore; he survived, but his injuries required 47 stitches. In September of 2018, 61-year-old neurologist William Lytton narrowly survived a shark bite on his leg while swimming in ten feet of water near the town of Truro. Two weeks later, 26-year-old Arthur Medici was fatally bitten<\/a> by a shark while boogie boarding at Newcomb Hollow Beach. It was the first shark-related fatality on Cape Cod since 1936.<\/p>\n Concerns over safety led to the creation of the Regional Shark Working Group led by Leslie Reynolds, Chief Ranger in 2012 and now Deputy Superintendent of CCNS. The group included the Division of Marine Fisheries, the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy, harbormasters, and local town officials. The group also sought the advice of shark experts from California, Australia, and South Africa, where large white shark populations have existed for decades.<\/p>\n Plans were quickly implemented to train lifeguards and beach safety personnel, install bleed kits and call boxes on the beaches, adopt beach signage and a shark flag warning system, and conduct ongoing public outreach and education. In 2016, the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy launched the Sharktivity iPhone app<\/a>, which updates confirmed shark sightings, now for over 750,000 users.<\/p>\nThe Return of New England’s White Shark Population<\/h2>\n
Living in Balance with a Marine Predator<\/h2>\n