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Leopard seals feed on sharks, researchers discover

Scientists ‘blown away to find sharks were on the menu’

Furvah Shah
Friday 17 December 2021 11:47 EST
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Leopard seals commonly prey on smaller fish, birds and mammals.
Leopard seals commonly prey on smaller fish, birds and mammals. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

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Leopard seals have been eating sharks, according to a study which documented the behaviour for the first time.

The study, by researchers and scientists in New Zealand and Australia, observed the diets of leopard seals by monitoring their predation and faeces.

They found signs of physical struggle with sharks on the seals’ bodies and shark remains in their faeces.

“We were blown away to find sharks were on the menu,” Krista van der Linde from LeopardSeals.org, one of the lead authors of the study, told The Guardian.

“But then we also found elephant fish and ghost sharks were also being hunted by the leopard seals.

“These fish have large spines to help protect them from predators and sure enough there were wounds on the leopard seals, sometimes even big spines embedded in their faces. One leopard seal had at least 14 such wounds.”

Leopard seals are top-end predators known to feast on a wide variety of species including crustaceans, smaller fish, birds, and other seals. Despite multiple previously global studies into their diets, there have been no earlier accounts of them eating sharks.

As part of a wider study on the diet of leopard seals in New Zealand waters, researchers recorded 39 observations of predation and studied 127 droppings samples collected between 1942 and 2019. Predation on sharks was detected in 23 per cent of observations of predation and 7 per cent of droppings.

“There could be something nutritionally about sharks that makes them desirable, [or] it could be sort of a treat,” Ms Linde said.

“A top predator feeding on another top predator is quite interesting in itself. If the leopard seals do keep increasing in the numbers and then that affects the shark populations, we really don’t know how that will affect things.”

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