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    Researchers shocked after pregnant 8-foot shark is eaten by mysterious predator

    By Steve Janoski,

    2024-09-05

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0ljo24_0vMJpeF400

    Shocked researchers are trying to figure out what kind of apex predator took out an 8-foot-shark as it wandered through the oceans — and they think it might have been another, bigger shark.

    Scientists from three states had been tracking the pregnant porbeagle shark for five months and hundreds of miles as it traveled from New England to Bermuda — until one of the tags they’d affixed to it suddenly began transmitting higher-than-normal temperature readings, according to the USA Today.

    “We knew that something happened,” James Sulikowski, director of the Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station at Oregon State University, told the outlet.

    7-foot shark was eaten by even bigger shark, researchers suspect

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3b9mu0_0vMJpeF400
    Researchers were shocked to learn that something had eaten an 8-foot shark they’d been tracking for months. Jon Dodd / SWNS

    Eventually, researchers figured out that the temperature spikes — which happened while the shark was still deep in the cold ocean — meant that some other animal had eaten their subject, according to a study published Tuesday in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers in Marine Science .

    “We knew that the tag was inside a warm-blooded creature,” Sulikowski said. “And we knew that it wasn’t a whale or mammal, because mammals are much warmer than that.”

    Shark chomps on Long Island fisherman’s arm after he reels it in: ‘Tried to unhook it’

    The scientists — who hail from Oregon State University, Arizona State University and the Atlantic Shark Institute in Rhode Island — think one of the creature’s own brethren is to blame.

    “My guess is probably a mako or a white shark because they do get larger than a porbeagle,” Sulikowski said.

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    Those two ocean predators — along with the porbeagles — have internal body temperatures of between 77 and 80 degrees Farenheit.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0CbGUJ_0vMJpeF400
    Scientists had tracked their subject from New England to Bermuda. Sulikowski et al/Frontiers
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1zzzDJ_0vMJpeF400
    The researchers had tagged the pregnant porbeagle shark. James Sulikowski / SWNS

    That’s exactly what the tag’s temp readings spiked to when their subject died.

    Sulikowski said the unusual shark-on-shark feast shows how little people know about the oceans.

    “It makes us want to study more and learn more about how susceptible other large sharks are to be eaten and who is the top dog out there.”

    For top headlines, breaking news and more, visit nypost.com.

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