Aerial footage provides proof of orcas killing great white sharks

Scientists explain the fear of great white sharks

Scientists have published new findings confirming that orcas hunt great white sharks, after the marine mammal was captured on camera killing one of the world's largest sea predators.

A pod of killer whales is seen chasing sharks during an hour-long pursuit off Mossel Bay, a port town in the southern Western Cape province, in helicopter and drone footage that informed a scientific study released this week.

Killer whales eating white sharks in Mossel Bay, South Africa by Sea Search Research & Conservation on YouTube

"This behavior has never been witnessed in detail before, and certainly never from the air," said lead author Alison Towner, a shark scientist at Marine Dynamics Academy in Gansbaai, South Africa.

One clip shows five orcas chasing and killing a great white and scientists believe three more were mauled to death during the hunt.

"Killer whales are highly intelligent and social animals. Their group hunting methods make them incredibly effective predators," Simon Elwen, a marine mammal specialist and study co-author said in a statement released Tuesday.

Orcas, the ocean's apex predator, have been known to prey on other shark species, but evidence of attacks on great whites was previously limited.

The study did not address the reasons behind the behavior.

Christiaan Stopforth, who shot the drone footage, posted video of the deadly interaction on Instagram.

"This was definitely one of the most exiting days of my life, filming these animal and observing them is a feeling you will not be able to describe to people," Stopforth wrote.

One of the whales was known to have attacked white sharks before, but the other four were not.

The authors said this suggested the practice was spreading, with earlier studies having established that the black and white animals can learn from one other through "cultural transmission."

Sharks disappeared from the area after the attack, with only one great white spotted in the next 45 days, according to the paper that was published in scientific journal Ecology.

The authors said this confirmed sharks have a flight response and could have broader implications.

"We first observed the flight responses of seven gills and white sharks to the presence of killer whales Port and Starboard in False Bay in 2015 and 2017. The sharks ultimately abandoned former key habitats, which has had significant knock-on effects for both the ecosystem and shark-related tourism," said South African National Parks' shark expert and marine biologist, Dr. Alison Kock.

In earlier observed cases, the animals ended up abandoning former key habitats, with consequences for the ecosystem and shark-related tourism, said marine biologist Alison Kock of South African National Parks.

The images were filmed in May and one of the videos first aired in June.  

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