Tag: blacktip sharks

  • How Sharks Carry the Future: Life Histories Written in Tide and Time

    How Sharks Carry the Future: Life Histories Written in Tide and Time

    The Season Beneath the Surface

    Along the North Carolina coast, spring does not arrive all at once. It filters in through temperature gradients, longer light, and currents that shift almost imperceptibly until the water itself feels different. Animals respond before people do. Some move north. Some move inshore. Others arrive carrying a process already underway — reproduction unfolding quietly inside bodies designed to measure time in seasons rather than days.

    This post explores shark reproduction in North Carolina, not as spectacle, but as a system of time, geography, and survival.

    Shark reproduction is rarely visible. There are no surface displays, no spectacle to announce the moment. Instead, lineage advances through anatomical engineering and geographic choreography. The coastline becomes a corridor through which inheritance travels. What appears to be migration is often the hidden architecture of the next generation. Across shark species, reproductive strategies are tightly bound to life history pacing — longevity, growth rate, and investment per offspring — forming evolutionary solutions calibrated to risk and time (Cortés, 2000; Musick & Ellis, 2005).

    Sharks do not share a single blueprint for reproduction. Some lay eggs encased in protective capsules that anchor to the seafloor. Others carry embryos internally and give birth to fully formed young. Between those extremes lies a spectrum of strategies — eggs retained inside the mother, embryos nourished in different ways, gestation stretched across seasons rather than weeks. The diversity is not incidental. It is the result of a lineage experimenting with how best to move the future through water: protect it externally, carry it internally, or invest in a few individuals built to survive from the first moment they enter open ocean (Carrier et al., 2012; Cortés, 2000).

    The Long Circuit of the Dogfish

    Each winter, Atlantic spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias) thin from our nearshore waters. Their absence is not disappearance but redistribution. Along the Northwest Atlantic coast the species occupies a broad range from Canada to the Carolinas, but this range is not a single undifferentiated mass. Seasonal movements reveal two general latitudinal tendencies — a northern contingent centered toward New England and Canadian waters, and a southern contingent extending toward North Carolina. In spring, portions of both groups converge in mid-Atlantic shelf waters, where overlapping migrations create temporary reproductive mixing before adults disperse again toward their habitual ranges (Carlson et al., 2014).

    This convergence is not random drift. It is structured migration. Satellite tracking shows that spiny dogfish follow repeatable north–south circuits tied to temperature and habitat gradients rather than wandering opportunistically (Carlson et al., 2014). During these seasonal overlaps, sex and maturity stage influence where individuals position themselves within the shared corridor. Females and mature animals use space differently from juveniles, reflecting reproductive status and energetic demand (DeVries et al., 2025). The result is a coastline briefly braided by lineage: individuals from distant home waters exchanging genetic material before returning south or north to complete gestation.

    migration patterns atlantic spiny dogfish

    Atlantic spiny dogfish do not disappear when they leave our waters; they redistribute. Each triangle marks where a tagged shark surfaced months after deployment, tracing seasonal circuits that braid northern and southern populations together before they separate again. The shaded regions show the broad envelope of movement and the smaller core areas used most consistently. Migration here is not wandering — it is structure. Reproduction moves along these same corridors, written into geography long before it is visible at the surface. | Graphic credit: Carlson et al., 2014

    After fertilization, females carry embryos for nearly two years — among the longest gestation periods recorded in sharks (Hamlett, 2005). A single pregnancy produces relatively small litters, commonly averaging six to twelve pups, each representing a substantial maternal investment spread across seasons rather than weeks (Hamlett, 2005; Cortés, 2000). Birth does not occur in the same waters where mating took place. Instead, adults retreat toward their familiar temperature zones and feeding grounds, and the next generation enters the ocean already geographically sorted. Migration and reproduction form a loop rather than a point. Each cycle redistributes genes across the coast while preserving the regional rhythms that structure the population.

    This extraordinary investment in time creates vulnerability. Sharks with slow growth, delayed maturity, and extended gestation replace themselves gradually, making populations sensitive to elevated fishing pressure (Cortés, 2000; Musick & Ellis, 2005). Removing a late-term female represents not a single loss, but the collapse of years of biological investment in a species evolved for endurance rather than speed.

    Reading the Body

    Female sharks often carry scars along their flanks and fins — pale arcs and punctures that appear deliberate enough to invite explanation. These marks are frequently attributed to mating, and sometimes that interpretation is correct. During copulation, males grip females with their teeth to maintain position in moving water, producing patterned abrasions consistent with tooth spacing (Pratt & Carrier, 2005). But the body of a coastal predator is an archive of many encounters, not all of them reproductive.

    Mating scars recorded on female blue sharks.
The pale arcs and punctures along the flank, gill region, and fins are bite marks left during courtship, when males grip females to maintain position in open water. Some individuals carry a single mark; others bear layered evidence of repeated encounters. These scars are not pathology but record — the body retaining brief moments of reproductive contact long after the act itself has vanished into current. What remains visible is the aftermath: lineage written lightly into skin. | Image credit: Vossgaetter et al., 2025
    Mating scars recorded on female blue sharks. The pale arcs and punctures along the flank, gill region, and fins are bite marks left during courtship, when males grip females to maintain position in open water. Some individuals carry a single mark; others bear layered evidence of repeated encounters. These scars are not pathology but record — the body retaining brief moments of reproductive contact long after the act itself has vanished into current. What remains visible is the aftermath: lineage written lightly into skin. | Image credit: Vossgaetter et al., 2025

    Fishing gear produces different signatures: hooks damage the jaw, entanglement leaves constricting linear abrasions, and vessel strikes create irregular trauma. Healed injuries accumulate across a lifetime, recording survival rather than singular events. Marine biologists interpret these marks through context — season, species behavior, wound geometry — understanding that a scar is evidence, not confession (Pratt & Carrier, 2005). The ocean rarely supplies a single explanation.

    The skin of a white shark carries a record of encounters.
Different wounds trace different histories: restrained bite marks associated with courtship (A & B), deeper bites from conflict (C & D), punctures and scratches left by struggling prey (E & F), abrasions from contact with reef or hard bottom (G), and the unmistakable geometry of propeller strikes (H). Each mark is a fragment of interaction preserved after the moment has passed. To read a shark’s body is to read a map of relationships — mating, hunting, collision, survival — written not as drama, but as accumulation. | Photo credit: Anderson et al., 2025
    The skin of a white shark carries a record of encounters. Different wounds trace different histories: restrained bite marks associated with courtship (A & B), deeper bites from conflict (C & D), punctures and scratches left by struggling prey (E & F), abrasions from contact with reef or hard bottom (G), and the unmistakable geometry of propeller strikes (H). Each mark is a fragment of interaction preserved after the moment has passed. To read a shark’s body is to read a map of relationships — mating, hunting, collision, survival — written not as drama, but as accumulation. | Photo credit: Anderson et al., 2025

    Scars are only one layer of interpretation. Sharks also carry quieter markers of sex and maturity written into their form. Males develop elongated claspers — modified fins that trail beneath the body — visible even at a distance once the animal reaches reproductive age. In immature males these structures are short and flexible, almost decorative. With maturity they lengthen and calcify, projecting clearly behind the pelvic fins like paired shadows. A school viewed from a pier often reveals this difference in motion: some bodies carry that trailing geometry, others do not. Even without knowing species, an observer is watching a mixed population divided by sex and age.

    Females, lacking claspers, present a cleaner silhouette. During pregnancy their bodies shift subtly. The abdomen rounds, not dramatically but enough to change how light moves across the flank. Experienced observers recognize gravid females less by size than by proportion — a redistribution of mass that suggests internal cargo rather than surface injury.

    The clasper itself is an evolutionary innovation — a modification of pelvic fins that allows internal fertilization in a fluid environment where external fertilization would disperse gametes too widely to ensure success (Hamlett, 2005). It is a structural solution to a problem posed by water: how to keep lineage from dissolving into current.

    Sex in sharks is written into the silhouette.
Males carry paired claspers — elongated extensions of the pelvic fins that lengthen and stiffen with maturity — while females lack them entirely. Even at a distance, the trailing geometry changes how the body reads in motion. What looks like a uniform school from the surface is already divided by anatomy: juveniles, adults, males, females, each stage visible to anyone patient enough to watch. | 
Photo credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    Sex in sharks is written into the silhouette. Males carry paired claspers — elongated extensions of the pelvic fins that lengthen and stiffen with maturity — while females lack them entirely. Even at a distance, the trailing geometry changes how the body reads in motion. What looks like a uniform school from the surface is already divided by anatomy: juveniles, adults, males, females, each stage visible to anyone patient enough to watch. |
    Photo credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

    These signals are quiet. They require patience. To read a shark in the water is to read a body moving through stages — juvenile, mature, gravid — each phase revealing that reproduction is not a single event but a condition carried across seasons. The distinction is anatomical literacy learned slowly, the way birdwatchers learn silhouettes or botanists learn leaf shape. Bodies announce their histories to those patient enough to look.

    Timing Written Into the Body

    Maturity does not arrive uniformly across a population. In many coastal sharks, size is a better predictor of reproductive readiness than age. Warmer water accelerates metabolism and growth, allowing juveniles in southern nurseries to reach maturity sooner than their northern counterparts (Cortés, 2000; Musick & Ellis, 2005). Temperature becomes a developmental force. A difference of a few degrees can compress or extend the timeline by years, shaping when an individual enters the reproductive pool.

    Juveniles and adults often sort themselves accordingly. Young sharks cluster in shallower, warmer margins where rapid growth offsets vulnerability. Larger, mature individuals occupy deeper or more exposed water, their size granting a margin of safety (Heupel et al., 2007). When mixed schools appear near piers, the variation in body shape reflects overlapping life stages sharing temporary habitat. What looks like a single group is often a layered demographic — future breeders moving alongside current ones.

    During mating seasons, additional cues surface. Mature males display fully calcified claspers held stiff against the body, while gravid females carry the rounded proportions of pregnancy. These changes are not theatrical. They are subtle adjustments in geometry, visible only to observers willing to compare silhouettes over time.

    Nurseries and Geographic Memory

    Many coastal shark species rely on estuaries as nursery grounds, where shallow, structured habitat increases juvenile survival by buffering predators and concentrating prey (Heupel et al., 2007). Young sharks enter a world scaled to their size. Warmer water accelerates growth, and complex shoreline geometry provides refuge during early vulnerability.

    Some females exhibit fidelity to nursery regions, returning to the same coastal systems that once sheltered them (Heupel et al., 2007). Habitat becomes inheritance. When nursery grounds degrade, the disruption extends beyond a single generation — it interrupts geographic memory embedded in the population itself.

    Multiple Ways to Continue

    Sandbar Sharks — Durability Over Speed

    A sandbar shark range from New England to Brazil. | Photo Credit: G.P. Schmahl/NOAA

    Sandbar shark | Photo Credit: G.P. Schmahl/NOAA

    Sandbar sharks (Carcharias plumbeus) invest heavily in durability. They mature late, produce relatively small litters, and rely on long development to generate robust juveniles capable of extended survival (Musick & Ellis, 2005). This strategy favors stability over speed. When mortality rises, recovery unfolds slowly because the species was never designed for rapid turnover.

    Sandbar shark reproduction unfolds slowly even by shark standards. Gestation lasts roughly 9–12 months, with litters typically ranging from 6 to 13 pups, though regional variation is common (Musick & Ellis, 2005). Along the mid-Atlantic coast mating generally occurs in spring and early summer, while birthing follows the next year in warmer estuarine margins. The delay is part of the design. Juveniles arrive when prey is abundant and water temperature accelerates growth, aligning birth with a narrow ecological window where survival odds briefly tilt in their favor.

    In Onslow County waters, juvenile sandbar sharks use shallow estuary margins as thermal accelerators. Warm, protected water shortens the time required to reach a size less vulnerable to predation. Growth in these early months is not cosmetic; it is survival measured in centimeters. A difference of a few inches can determine whether a young shark passes unnoticed beneath larger predators or becomes part of their diet (Heupel et al., 2007). The nursery functions as a buffer against probability. By compressing early growth into a brief window of ecological generosity, sandbars convert geography into longevity.

    Blacktip Sharks — Timing as Opportunity

    Atlantic blacktip sharks | Photo credit: Shutterstock
    Atlantic blacktip sharks | Photo credit: Shutterstock

    Blacktip sharks (Carcharhinus limbatus) align reproduction with seasonal pulses. Birth coincides with warm water and prey abundance, creating a temporary ecological advantage for juveniles. This strategy accepts higher early mortality but compensates through timing — survival synchronized with opportunity (Heupel & Simpfendorfer, 2008).

    Blacktip sharks compress their timeline. Gestation averages 10–12 months and litters often contain 1 to 10 pups, with smaller litters more common in northern portions of their range (Heupel & Simpfendorfer, 2008). Mating occurs in late spring and summer; pups are born the following late spring when baitfish concentrations peak in shallow coastal waters. Their strategy hinges on synchronization. Birth is timed not to safety, but to opportunity — a calculated arrival into abundance.

    Along our piers in late spring and summer, blacktip juveniles appear in pulses that mirror the prey fields they depend on. Schools of baitfish create moving refuges — density as defense — and young blacktips learn to survive inside motion itself. Survival belongs to individuals able to exploit brief windows, grow fast, and disperse before scarcity returns (Heupel & Simpfendorfer, 2008).

    Bonnethead Sharks — Redundancy and Retention

    Bonnethead shark | Photo credit: NC Aquariums
    Bonnethead shark | Photo credit: NC Aquariums

    Bonnethead sharks (Sphyrna tiburo) operate on one of the shortest reproductive cycles among coastal sharks. Gestation lasts approximately 4–5 months, and litters commonly range from 4 to 16 pups depending on female size (Hamlett, 2005). Mating generally occurs in late summer, but sperm storage allows fertilization to be delayed until environmental conditions favor gestation. Pups are born in late spring and early summer, entering warm shallow waters that function as immediate nurseries. The speed of the cycle reflects a species built for resilience through repetition — rapid turnover as insurance against instability.

    Bonnetheads add evolutionary contingency. Rare cases of parthenogenesis — reproduction without fertilization — demonstrate biological redundancy when mates are scarce (Chapman et al., 2007). Such flexibility underscores a principle of lineage persistence: survival tolerates complexity if complexity improves continuity.

    Bonnetheads, often glimpsed in shallow surf or near pilings, compress life history into shorter cycles, allowing populations to respond quickly to environmental change. Unlike many coastal sharks, females are capable of storing viable sperm for extended periods, delaying fertilization until conditions favor successful gestation (Hamlett, 2005). This ability decouples mating from pregnancy, allowing reproduction to align with environmental timing rather than immediate opportunity. Redundancy becomes insurance in a fragmented coastal landscape. Their persistence is not brute strength but flexibility — an evolutionary acknowledgment that coastlines are rarely stable for long (Cortés, 2000).

    Sand Tiger Sharks — Survival Before Birth

    Sand tiger shark | Photo credit: Mitchell, 2024
    Sand tiger sharks | Photo credit: Mitchell, 2024

    Sand tiger sharks (Carcharias taurus) represent an uncompromising alternative. Embryos compete within the uterus, and only the strongest survive to birth through intrauterine cannibalism — a process that produces a small number of highly developed juveniles (Hamlett, 2005). From a human perspective the mechanism appears brutal. In evolutionary terms it is a concentrated investment in pre-birth survival.

    Sand tiger gestation stretches close to 9–12 months, but the internal competition that defines their development reduces litters to one or two surviving pups per uterus despite a much larger initial embryo count (Hamlett, 2005; Branstetter & Musick, 1994). Mating occurs offshore in cooler months, and births typically follow in spring or early summer. The resulting juveniles are large at birth — already capable hunters — trading quantity for immediate competence. Survival is front-loaded. The species invests in a few individuals built to endure rather than many built to gamble.

    For sand tigers occasionally seen near South Topsail Island, this pre-birth selection produces juveniles that enter the water already comparable in size to many adult coastal fish. They arrive as functioning predators. Instead of a long vulnerable childhood, sand tigers begin life past the most dangerous bottleneck. Their subsequent behavior reflects this early security: slow movement, energy conservation, and longevity built on having cleared the lethal threshold before birth (Branstetter & Musick, 1994).

    It is tempting to read personality into origin. Yet adult sand tigers move with calm efficiency, rarely engaging in unnecessary conflict. A harsh developmental filter does not predict a harsh adulthood. It simply ensures survival past the most intense threshold.

    Together, these strategies map the same coastline through different biological clocks. Some sharks survive by accelerating early growth. Others invest in a few individuals built to last. Still others hedge their future with redundancy. Diversity is not excess — it is resilience expressed through bodies.

    The Coast as a Clock

    Longevity is the silent partner in every reproductive strategy. Long-lived sharks can afford to reproduce slowly, distributing investment across decades. Shorter-lived species compress reproduction into tighter intervals. Neither strategy is superior in isolation. Each is calibrated to environmental tempo (Cortés, 2000).

    The coastline holds many clocks at once — tides measured in hours, migrations in seasons, lineage in centuries. Sharks survive by aligning their bodies to the clock that fits their niche. Gestation becomes a wager on stability. Migration becomes inheritance in motion. A nursery becomes infrastructure for continuity.

    To observe a pregnant shark offshore is to witness a process already years in motion. The animal carries not only embryos but evolutionary decisions accumulated across millennia: how many to produce, when to move, where to shelter, how long to live. Reproduction is less an event than a continuity. Its future depends not on spectacle, but on whether the slow mathematics of these lives can continue unfolding inside waters still capable of carrying them forward.

    References

    Branstetter, S., & Musick, J. A. (1994). Age and growth estimates for the sand tiger in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 123(2), 242-254. https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(1994)123<0242:aageft>2.3.co;2

    Carlson, A. E., Hoffmayer, E. R., Tribuzio, C. A., & Sulikowski, J. A. (2014). The use of satellite tags to redefine movement patterns of spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias) along the U.S. East Coast: Implications for fisheries management. PLoS ONE, 9(7), e103384. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103384

    Carrier, J. C., Musick, J. A., & Heithaus, M. R. (2012). Biology of sharks and their relatives (2nd ed.). CRC Press.

    Chapman, D. D., Shivji, M. S., Louis, E., Sommer, J., Fletcher, H., & Prodöhl, P. A. (2007). Virgin birth in a hammerhead shark. Biology Letters, 3(4), 425-427. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2007.0189

    Cortés, E. (2000). Life history patterns and correlations in Sharks. Reviews in Fisheries Science, 8(4), 299-344. https://doi.org/10.1080/10408340308951115

    DeVries, C., Gartland, J., & Latour, R. J. (2025). Patterns in spiny dogfish consumption by sex and maturity stage relate to prey availability and environmental forcing in the Northwest Atlantic. Frontiers in Marine Science, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2025.1621343

    Heupel, M., Carlson, J., & Simpfendorfer, C. (2007). Shark nursery areas: Concepts, definition, characterization and assumptions. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 337, 287-297. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps337287

    Heupel, M., & Simpfendorfer, C. (2008). Movement and distribution of young bull sharks Carcharhinus leucas in a variable estuarine environment. Aquatic Biology, 1, 277-289. https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00030

    Musick, J. A., & Ellis, J. K. (2005). Reproductive evolution of chondrichthyans. In Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny of Chondrichthyes (1st ed., pp. 45-79). Science Publishers.

    Pratt, H. L., & Carrier, J. C. (2005). Elasmobranch courtship and mating behavior. In Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny of Chondrichthyes (1st ed., pp. 129-169). Science Publishers.

  • Riding Out the Storm: Sharks and Hurricanes in North Carolina

    Riding Out the Storm: Sharks and Hurricanes in North Carolina

    When a hurricane or tropical storm barrels toward eastern North Carolina, humans board up windows and evacuate—but what do sharks do? Thanks to acoustic tagging and long-term monitoring, we now know that sharks don’t just passively endure storms. They have strategies for survival, and some are surprisingly sophisticated.

    Sensing the Storm: Barometric Pressure

    Sharks, especially coastal species like blacktips and bulls, appear to respond less to wind and waves than to rapid drops in barometric pressure. Research shows that blacktip juveniles in Florida left shallow nursery bays when pressure plummeted during Tropical Storm Gabrielle (2001). They returned after the storm once pressure stabilized. This suggests sharks aren’t reacting to turbulence itself but to the atmospheric signal that precedes it (Heupel et al., 2003). For blacktips, studies suggest that a drop of ~10 millibars in less than 24 hours is enough to trigger evacuation. Bulls show similar patterns, though individual responses vary (Boucek et al., 2019). In general, it’s not an exact “preferred” pressure number but rather the rate of change that matters.

    Shark Species and Storm Behavior

    Blacktip Sharks (Carcharhinus limbatus)

    • Known responders to pressure drops. Juveniles flee shallow estuaries and head for deeper water as storms approach.
    • Return quickly. They often reappear in their nurseries within a day or two after conditions settle.
    • Key study: Blacktip sharks respond to falling barometric pressure associated with Tropical Storm Gabrielle. (Heupel et al., 2003).

    Bull Sharks (Carcharhinus leucas)

    • Juveniles in Florida’s Everglades left estuaries before Hurricane Irma (2017). Some moved out days ahead of landfall, suggesting pressure cues were critical.
    • More variability. Some left immediately, others lingered, highlighting differences in individual thresholds. 
    • Key study: Ecological responses of estuarine organisms to Hurricane Irma. (Boucek et al. 2019).

    Sandbar Sharks (Carcharhinus plumbeus)

    • Nursery dependence. Juveniles use very shallow nurseries in Chesapeake Bay and Pamlico Sound (Grubbs et al., 2007).
    • Storm strategy (inferred). While direct hurricane data are lacking, their reliance on shallow estuaries suggests they likely mirror blacktip behavior—seeking deeper channels when pressure plummets.

    Spinner Sharks (Carcharhinus brevipinna)

    • Less direct data. Telemetry studies document their presence on the Mid-Atlantic shelf (NOAA, 2019), but no hurricane-event tracking exists yet.
    • Probable pattern. Like their blacktip relatives, they are expected to move offshore or deeper in response to rapid barometric drops.

    Eastern North Carolina: Local Implications

    NC Marine & Estuary Map

    NC Marine and Estuary Map | Credit: ESRI

    • Pamlico Sound Bull Shark Nursery. Since 2011, juveniles have been recorded here each summer, tracked with acousti: c tags. Seasonal exits toward deeper water (Cape Lookout to Hatteras, even Cape Canaveral in winter) suggest a built-in escape route when storms loom (Bangley et al., 2018).
    • Sandbars off Cape Hatteras. Juveniles overwinter just offshore in <20 m depths—safer refuge during storm surge compared to shallow estuaries (Musick & Colvocoresses, 1988).
    • Barrier Islands & Inlets. When storms surge into the sounds, sharks likely use inlets to escape into the continental shelf’s deeper, more stable waters.

    Why This Matters

    Hurricanes don’t just rearrange coastlines—they reshape the ecology of estuaries and nurseries. Storm-driven freshening of Pamlico Sound (as seen after Hurricanes Dennis, Floyd, and Irene) can cause hypoxia (low dissolved oxygen levels that make it difficult for aquatic life to breathe) and prey shifts (Paerl et al., 2001). For sharks, evacuating shallow water isn’t just about avoiding turbulence—it’s survival against collapsing water quality.

    Key Takeaways for NC Shark Ecology

    • Sharks sense storms primarily via barometric pressure drops, not turbulence.
    • Blacktips: textbook responders; evacuate at ~10 mb drops in 24 hrs.
    • Bulls: similar, but with more individual variation.
    • Sandbars & Spinners: less direct data, but likely respond in kind.
    • Eastern NC: Pamlico Sound, Core/Bogue, and Chesapeake Bay nurseries mean juvenile sharks face real storm risks—and escaping to the shelf is a proven strategy.

    Sharks and Storms: A Take-Home Message

    Next time a hurricane approaches Topsail, Surf City, or anywhere along our NC coastline, remember: the sharks know it’s coming too. Long before the first raindrops fall, many have already slipped into deeper waters, riding out the storm in safety—only to return once the skies clear and the estuaries calm.

    References

    Bangley, C. W., Paramore, L., Shiffman, D. S., & Rulifson, R. A. (2018). Increased abundance and nursery habitat use of the bull shark (Carcharhinus leucas) in Pamlico Sound, North Carolina. Ecology and Evolution, 8(11), 5195–5205. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3760

    Boucek, R. E., Rehage, J. S., Adams, A. J., Santos, R., Blewett, D. A., & Lowerre-Barbieri, S. K. (2019). Ecological responses of estuarine organisms to Hurricane Irma. Ecology and Evolution, 9(21), 11979–11991. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5209

    Grubbs, R. D., Musick, J. A., Conrath, C. L., & Romine, J. G. (2007). Long-term movements, habitat fidelity, and seasonal occurrence of juvenile sandbar sharks in the Chesapeake Bay region. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 333, 287–301. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps333287

    Heupel, M. R., Simpfendorfer, C. A., & Hueter, R. E. (2003). Running before the storm: Blacktip sharks respond to falling barometric pressure associated with Tropical Storm Gabrielle. Fisheries Research, 63(2), 193–196. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0165-7836(02)00211-7

    Musick, J. A., & Colvocoresses, J. A. (1988). Distribution and abundance of sharks from the central U.S. Atlantic continental shelf. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 117(1), 44–55. https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(1988)117<0044:DOOS>2.3.CO;2

    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (2019). Spinner shark (Carcharhinus brevipinna) presence in Mid-Atlantic waters. NOAA Technical Report. https://repository.library.noaa.gov/view/noaa/22487

    Paerl, H. W., Bales, J. D., Ausley, L. W., Buzzelli, C. P., Crowder, L. B., Eby, L. A., Fear, J. M., Go, M., Peierls, B. L., Richardson, T. L., & Ramus, J. S. (2001). Ecosystem impacts of three sequential hurricanes (Dennis, Floyd, and Irene) on the United States’ largest lagoonal estuary, Pamlico Sound, NC. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 98(10), 5655–5660. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.171093598

  • Think You Know Your Sharks? The 3 Most Misidentified

    Think You Know Your Sharks? The 3 Most Misidentified

    Many sharks have similar appearances in body shape and colorations, especially when viewed from above. Juvenile sharks can be difficult to identify because their markings and proportions are not developed to fully resemble adults. The ability to obtain clear, prolonged views of sharks underwater can be difficult due to shark movement and water clarity. Not all people that encounter sharks have the specialized knowledge required for accurate identification.

    But which sharks are often misidentified in North Carolina, and why? It’s often like a game of “can you spot the differences?” when trying to identify similar species. Let’s review the top 3 misidentified sharks in NC.

    ? Who are the Top 3 Misidentified Shark

    1. Sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) vs dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus)

    Why They Are Confused

    Both sharks can grow to large sizes with a bulky appearance with overlapping habitats. Both have a brown to bronze upper body that fades into a white belly. They look similar because they are members of the same shark genus, Carcharhinus or Requiem sharks, that share some of the same qualities such as, slender to stout bodies, their first dorsal fin is larger than their second dorsal fin, have a long upper tail lobe, and single-cusped blade-shaped teeth.

    Key Differences

    • Sandbar shark: Large, tall dorsal fin with its leading edge located ahead of its pectoral fins
    • Dusky shark: Slightly less bulky than the sandbar shark with a shorter dorsal fin that originates behind its narrower pectoral fins, and a snout length that is equal to or shorter than its mouth width making it appear more pointy. Side note: dusky sharks prefer cooler water temperatures, between 66 and 82 degrees fahrenheit, so they may not be seen frequently in warm summer waters.

    2. Blacktip shark (Carcharhinus limbatus) vs spinner shark (Carcharhinus brevipinna)

    Why They Are Confused

    Both sharks leap from the water and spin during feeding. They look similar because they are members of the same shark genus, Carcharhinus or Requiem sharks, that share some of the same qualities such as, slender to stout bodies, their first dorsal fin is larger than their second dorsal fin, have a long upper tail lobe, and single-cusped blade-shaped teeth.

    Key Differences

    • Spinner shark: More slender, all fins (except the anal fin) are often black-tipped, spins more during breaching
    • Blacktip shark: Heavier body than the spinner shark, only dorsal and pectoral fins have black tips, and the anal fin has a white tip.

    3. Atlantic sharpnose shark (Rhizoprionodon terraenovae) vs juvenile blacktip shark (Carcharhinus limbatus)

    Why They Are Confused

    The juvenile blacktip shark has not fully developed into its final adult stage, so it lacks markings and definition that can distinguish it better from Atlantic sharpnose shark. The blacktip, in its adult stage, can reach up to 6 feet, while the Atlantic sharpnose shark only reaches a maximum length of 3.5 that makes it a similar size to a juvenile blacktip shark. Both forage in shallower waters and share the same habitat.

    Key Differences

    • Juvenile blacktip sharks: Have black tips on their fins, and a white tipped anal fin. Gray to gray-brown coloration with a white underside.Wedge-shaped line or Z-shaped line along its sides.
    • Atlantic sharpnose sharks: Have white spots along its side, second dorsal fin, blacktipped, originating over or behind its anal fin. This will be the only black tipped fin on this species.

    Safety Note: Are They Dangerous?

    Most sharks seen nearshore in Onslow County are not aggressive toward humans and play a crucial role in ocean health. Most sightings are brief and harmless. That said, avoid swimming near fishing piers or schools of baitfish, especially at dawn or dusk, and between fishers casting from the shore.

    Why It Matters

    Correct species identification helps:

    • Local fishermen adhere to fishing regulations
    • Researchers track species populations
    • Beachgoers feel informed and safe
    • Conservationists protect nurseries and feeding grounds

    Want to Help?

    Have you seen a shark? I am looking for information on locations of juvenile sharks. You can report sightings or photos to support my independent research by posting on my social media channels or email. Please follow our Instagram and Facebook pages to stay informed, ask questions, or post your pictures!

  • Shark Watch: Meet the Seasonal Visitors to Onslow County’s Coast

    Atlantic blacktip sharks | Credit: iStock

    North Carolina’s coastline is home to a surprisingly rich and dynamic marine ecosystem — and sharks are among its most vital (and misunderstood) residents. In Onslow County, from the inlets around Sneads Ferry to the open waters off Topsail Island, over a dozen species of sharks migrate, feed, or even give birth throughout the year.

    But which sharks are here, and when? Let’s dive in.

    Why Sharks Visit Onslow County

    The waters off Onslow County are part of a critical marine highway where warm Gulf Stream currents mix with nutrient-rich coastal waters. This convergence creates a perfect buffet for migrating predators like sharks, especially in spring through early fall.

    The area also includes estuaries, inlets, and sandbars — ideal habitats for young sharks and mothers giving birth. Some species pass through, while others stay for an entire season.

    Seasonal Visitors: A Month-by-Month Guide

    SeasonCommon Shark SpeciesNotes
    Spring (March-May)Blacktip, spinner, Atlantic sharpnoseBlacktips often arrive first. Spinner sharks can be seen leaping nearshore.
    Summer (June-August)Sandbar, bull, dusky, hammerhead, tigerHigh diversity and activity. Shark pupping peaks in estuarine waters.
    Fall (September-November)Blacktip, scalloped hammerhead, sand tigerJuveniles migrate out, adults fatten up before heading south.
    Winter (December-February)Occasional Sandbar or Atlantic sping dogfishMost large sharks migrate south or deeper offshore.

    Shark Spotlights

    • Blacktip sharks – Fast and social (in packs), often seen inshore during spring and fall around large schools of fish.
    • Sandbar sharks – One of the most common summer sharks, easily misidentified as a dusky shark, sand tiger shark or bull shark.
    • Scalloped hammerheads – Occasionally observed near deeper channels and wrecks.
    • Atlantic spiny dogfish – A cold-season visitor, small and harmless mesopredator.

    Safety Note: Are They Dangerous?

    Sharks in Onslow County are not aggressive toward humans and play a crucial role in ocean health. Most sightings are brief and harmless. That said, avoid swimming near fishing piers or schools of baitfish, especially at dawn or dusk, and between fishers casting from the shore..

    Why It Matters

    Understanding seasonal shark activity helps:

    • Local fishermen avoid bycatch
    • Researchers track species health and migration
    • Beachgoers feel informed and safeResearchers track species health and migration
    • Conservationists protect nurseries and feeding grounds

    Want to Help?

    Have you seen a shark or need help with identification? You can report sightings or photos by posting or emailing me with your questions and to support my independent research. Follow our Instagram and Facebook pages to stay informed, ask questions, or learn how to participate in future citizen science efforts.