Divers set up a camera in a lobster den. What happened next shocked them all...

Divers set up a camera in a lobster den. What happened next shocked them all...

Scientists in Australia were surprised to see Port Jackson and crested horn sharks appear out of the darkness.

Published: October 8, 2024 at 2:01 pm

Researchers studying lobster predation on sea urchins were surprised to record footage of an unexpected urchin predator: sharks.

After setting up a camera in a lobster den overnight – with “strategically placed” urchins inside the den – they were shocked when most of the urchins were eaten by Port Jackson and crested horn sharks. 

Port Jackson shark eating urchin
Port Jackson and crested horn sharks raided the lobster den/Jeremy Day

This was designed to be a lobster experiment, but sharks came in and ate the majority (45%) of the tethered urchins while lobsters ate few (4%),” says Jeremy Day, a PhD student at University of Newcastle who led the study.

“Lobsters seemed generally uninterested in eating urchins,” he says.

The footage shows the sharks sneaking in to snack on huge sea urchins, which they can handle with ease.

Watch the sharks snacking on the urchins/Jeremy Day 

“It has been thought until now that there were few or no predators capable of handling very large urchins,” says Day. “Sharks are overlooked predators of sea urchins in New South Wales.”

This discovery challenges previous beliefs that lobsters are key predators of sea urchins and could help conservationists protect reefs by controlling urchin numbers.

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