Mossel Bay sharks ‘eating one another’

Mossel Bay scientist Sophu Qoma features as part of National Geographic Wild's Sharkfest this month.

It’s the National Geographic Wild annual Sharkfest on television this month.

The first day of the fest, July 1, started with a show filmed near Seal Island, off Dias Beach at Mossel Bay, and with the news that sharks are eating one another.

It is not sharks eating seals or killer whales eating sharks, but sharks eating sharks.

National Geographic Wild did a short film on a Mossel Bay scientist, Sophu Qoma, as part of Sharkfest.

In a media release National Geographic Wild noted: “Around the world, reports of shark-on-shark attacks are increasing. Now scientists have a new theory on what makes up most of the great white shark’s diet, and it’s not seals.”

‘Groundbreaking investigation’

The media release notes: “In the ground-breaking investigation off Seal Island, scientists Enrico Gennari and Lacey Williams led a team of experts, capturing conclusive evidence of sharks eating sharks.”

Shark Eat Shark premiered on July 1 at 18:45 on National Geographic Wild and the programme was described thus: “Gennari and Williams embark on a factual voyage with the help of Neil Hammerschlag to solve a predator-prey mystery, by casting a wide net of scientific experiments across the bay.

“The pair use camera tags and baited remote underwater vehicles, skin samples and more, to try to capture concrete evidence that sharks are preying on other sharks.”

Short film

The short film on Qoma is titled, Breaking the surface: Diversity in the ocean and marine ecosystem.

This film follows her research of great white sharks.

Additional shark-focused programming is available across Disney+ throughout July, with plenty of awe-inspiring moments to enjoy and inspire.

National Geographic’s Sharkfest hub, natgeo.com/sharkfest, will be updated throughout the month to include enhanced content about sharks, including facts, photos and videos, quizzes and more.

Read original story on www.mosselbayadvertiser.com

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Ruan de Ridder

A digital support specialist at Caxton Local Media, known for his contributions to the digital landscape. He has covered major stories, including the Moti kidnappings, and edits and curates news of national importance from over 50 Caxton Local News sites.
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