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Captain Brett McBride climbs into the shark lift with Mary Lee.
Captain Brett McBride climbs into the shark lift with Mary Lee.

Tracking the Great Whites: What We Can Learn From Genie and Mary Lee

South Carolina surfers and other Lowcountry residents can't stop talking about two white sharks that have been spotted just off the East Coast. But these 16-foot giants may have been swimming in our waters all along.

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Captain Brett McBride climbs into the shark lift with Mary Lee.

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For the last couple of months, Charleston, South Carolina鈥檚 Post and Courier newspaper has made Lowcountry residents鈥攑articularly the divers and surfers鈥 that a 16-foot long, 3,465-pound great white shark has been cruising local waters. The shark, nicknamed Mary Lee, was captured and tagged last summer as part of a Cape Cod expedition led by the research team. Since early November, Mary Lee鈥檚 GPS tracker has pinged with almost daily frequency as she has cruised and hunted nearshore waters from Jacksonville to Charleston to the beaches of Wilmington, North Carolina. On December 9, Genie, another OCEARCH shark, pinged just off the coast of Savannah, Georgia, proving that Mary Lee鈥檚 flukes were no fluke.

Shark tagging. Shark tagging.
This tracking map shows Mary Lee's movements around South Carolina. This tracking map shows Mary Lee’s movements around South Carolina.

Southerners are no strangers to big sharks. In 1964, the world record Tiger shark, a 1,780-pounder, was caught at Cherry Grove, South Carolina鈥檚 fishing pier. More recently, the viral video of an assault by a big bull shark on a Myrtle Beach red drum made tidal creekgoers from Capes Hatteras to Canaveral just a little nervous. Still, we southerners are not at all used to great white sharks, and Mary Lee has become a source of regular conversation in the surf lineups from Tybee to Masonboro Island鈥攑articularly because surf forecasting and Google mapping are pushing more and more of us to explore remote shoals and outer sandbars along our coastlines.

To satiate a little morbid curiousity, I had a chat with Arnold Postell, senior biologist at the South Carolina aquarium in Charleston. Postell then put me in touch with a colleague鈥擠r. Salvadore Jorgenson, a research scientist with the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Jorgenson then suggested I finish the conversation with Dr. Greg Skomal, a biologist with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries who helped tag Genie last summer off Cape Cod.

What follows are excepts from those conversations.

Arnold Postell, senior biologist at The South Carolina Aquarium

There鈥檚 a good bit of chatter on the surfing and fishing bulletin boards and in the lineups about Mary Lee and Genie. We don鈥檛 usually associate nearshore southeastern waters with great whites.
Not a lot known is known about great whites on the East Coast. The focus has traditionally been on California, Australia, South Africa. But I think that the tagging research that鈥檚 been going on may point out another geographic area to study them. It鈥檚 been known that they were around here鈥攆ishermen would confirm sightings, and we had one that turned up dead off Morris Island a few years ago (2008). So every year, every other year, we might get a sighting. But now that they鈥檙e actually being tracked鈥攏o one had been seeing these animals鈥擨 think what we鈥檙e realizing is that offshore in the southeast, our local waters, not even out to the Gulf Stream, might be a wintering spot for great whites. That鈥檚 kind of an unknown that we鈥檙e figuring out right now.

It鈥檚 amazing to see the video footage of the guys standing alongside the sharks on the Ocearch boats, and to realize we share water with a predator of that size.
One take home I鈥檝e had from this is that it鈥檚 probably been going on as long as we can think of; we鈥檙e just now getting real data about it. So I wouldn鈥檛 say it鈥檚 a new phenomenon鈥攖he phenomenon is that we鈥檙e learning about it in real-time while it鈥檚 happening. I mean, how many great white attacks have there been in Charleston ever? It鈥檚 important to keep that in perpsective. I saw the ping off Kiawah, and Mary Lee is definitely close in, but I think that鈥檚 probably been going on all along. I grew up surfing out here too.

With this real-time data out there now, I can鈥檛 wait to see where they go and come back. The next few months will be quite telling. Really, this opens up a whole new window of opportunity for researchers to study great whites in the southeast.

They鈥檙e known as a more cold-water species. Is it a surprise they鈥檙e down here now?
Well, temperature is the big quirk. My first response is no because of the nearshore water temperature (around 55 degrees). It鈥檚 pretty cold here now, but in August, you have 80, 85-degree water. So they go back to the northeast. In California, the water鈥檚 cold year-round. It鈥檚 interesting, if you look at their tracks, they鈥檙e not really going out to the Gulf Stream; they鈥檙e riding out that cold water channel right on the inside, close to shore. Because 40 miles out at the Gulf Stream, the water鈥檚 still 75 degrees.

There鈥檚 a good zone of food between the Gulf Stream and shore.
Definitely. I鈥檝e been diving in December鈥攚e go out to Charleston 60, a real close-in wreck. One of the best dives I ever had out there, we found hundreds of amberjacks, and 50-plus big bull red drum just in a feeding frenzy over baitfish. Now that folks have GoPros, they鈥檙e dropping them to the bottom where they鈥檙e fishing. I was watching someone鈥檚 footage yesterday鈥攈undreds of black sea bass and sheepshead. So we have plenty of food for a big predator.

Southern North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia is a region called the South Atlantic Bight. It鈥檚 one of the least well-known and most diverse fisheries because it gets a great blend between the warm water southern animals and the cold water northern ones. The waters are also very well managed, and that鈥檚 not only a benefit for fishermen, but also for sharks.

So we鈥檙e obviously not so high on the food list.
They do a lot of research on feeding behavior of great whites鈥攖hings like using artificial seals for lures. I don鈥檛 think great whites go around just biting everything. Some sharks, like bull sharks, people always laugh at the stuff they find in their stomachs. I don鈥檛 think great whites fall into that category.

Given the track of Mary Lee, would you think twice about any of the outer shoals and bars as a surfer?
In the summertime, not at all. In the wintertime, I always lean back on鈥攁nd I don鈥檛 want to brush over the fact that we have a 16-foot great white in our waters, but I go back to the fact that they鈥檝e been here all along and we haven鈥檛 had those interactions. Now there is one offshore shoal you and I know of in particular鈥攜ou鈥檙e out in the ocean and the water鈥檚 a lot clearer. Would I go surfing out there right now? Well, that probably depends on where the last ping was.

Dr. Salvadore Jorgenson, a research scientist with the Monterey Bay Aquarium

Can you give sort of a general idea of the known and unknowns of great white migratary behavior along the East Coast versus California?
We鈥檝e been studying white sharks a lot longer on the West Coast than the East Coast鈥攚e鈥檝e tracked over 100 out here, so the insights we鈥檝e gained might have some relevance on the East Coast, where they鈥檙e much less studied. One thing we鈥檝e learned is that the more you look, the more you see them. They move around and are closer to populated areas than we probably expect. The more we tag them and look for them, the more we realize that they鈥檙e around. A good example: We鈥檝e known for a long time that white sharks are here around San Francisco, but recently, we鈥檝e been tracking them entering the San Francisco Bay. Well, there are a lot of people who swim out to Alcatraz鈥攐pen water swimmers鈥攁nd the Alcatraz swim is fairly popular. So the talk, when people are pulling their bathing caps on is, “Oh yeah, the sharks are probably here,” but it was sort of legend until we started to get some data back that, yes indeed, the sharks do come under the bridge and they do swim around Alcatraz. So the take home from that is: I think the last time there was even a shark that bit someone in the area was back in the 1950s at Baker Beach near the Golden Gate, so we鈥檙e over 50 years without an attck. But when we put on the tags, we realize that the sharks are swimming around that area鈥攁nd under the bridge鈥攁ll the time.

My friends and I have been amazed at how close Mary Lee in particular comes to the beaches here鈥攚e even had a 13-foot juvenile die after it beached on Morris Island a few years ago鈥攔ight by one of our favorite sandbar breaks. That was the first time most anyone here had even heard of great whites in our waters.
I鈥檓 a surfer too鈥擨 surf out here in California鈥攁nd when we realize that they鈥檙e there, and they鈥檝e been there the whole time we鈥檝e been surfing, you sort of go, Well, okay. On the East Coast, it鈥檚 sort of a new finding because they haven鈥檛 tagged too many sharks. But the same point I wanted to make is that, from what we鈥檝e learned from sharks on the West Coast but also around New Zealand, part of the year they move into warmer waters. So it鈥檚 not really surprising that in the fall they were out off Montauk and then moving south after the winter鈥檚 coming on. That鈥檚 what they do out there. And those same sharks will probably end up going back up north the following year.

The waters along the shoreline of the East Coast tend to be murkier and shallower than the West Coast. Maybe our hope is that the shallowness of the water or the murkiness will somehow make it less likely that we鈥檒l have a direct encounter.
Well, really, I think they run the whole range. We have sharks in San Francisco Bay where it can be shallow and murky. The Farallon Islands, the waters are much clearer and right along the edge of the Continental Shelf. So I don鈥檛 think they display much of a preference either way. Greg Skomal in Massachusetts can talk more about this, but the fact that they鈥檙e seeing more sharks on the East Coast seems to be tied to the fact that more seals have been hauling out in the northeast. Of course, here in Central and Northern California, where they haul out, we have a lot of sharks too.

Really as a surfer, I consider it more dangerous to actually drive to the beach than actually being in the water. But there鈥檚 this morbid fascination鈥攖he idea that you鈥檙e not in control. That there鈥檚 this larger, wild animal that could get you. You don鈥檛 feel that way driving a car, but it鈥檚 many, many times more dangerous to drive than to paddle out.

Dr. Greg Skomal, a biologist with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries

Dr. Jorgenson pointed out that we know far less about the movements and habits of white sharks on the East Coast than most other so-called hot spots around the world.
It鈥檚 true. The bottom line is that we don鈥檛 know a lot about this particular species in the Atlantic. Up here on the northeast coast, we鈥檝e known that in the summer months you can find lots of blue sharks. More recently we鈥檙e finding the same is true of white sharks. There鈥檚 a changing dynamic up here, and in the last few years we鈥檝e had unprecedented access to these animals, and that鈥檚 let us put tags on them.

Because of the increase in seal populations?
Like many other parts of the world, we鈥檝e had a restoration of the seal population up here鈥攁 high seal abundance and thus a high predator abundance. They鈥檙e being drawn in close to Cape Cod. We鈥檝e tagged 34 sharks in the last four years, but the ones that get the most attention are the ones that are tagged by OCEARCH because you can track them in real-time.

It鈥檚 nothing really new that they do occur off the southeastern coast in the winter, but what鈥檚 bringing it home to people is the fact that it鈥檚 now being brought to them live so to speak. They鈥檝e been there, but they鈥檙e just not a conspicuous species. Not a lot are caught. They keep to themselves and don鈥檛 spend a lot of time very close to shore鈥攖hey tend to stay a few miles out. You don鈥檛 have seals piled up on the beaches like we do up here, which draws them up on the shoreline. Off the southeast, they鈥檙e shifting gears, to feed on porpoises, dolphins, and big drum and amberjack. And they love to scavenge dead right whales.

I guess it鈥檚 as much an issue of being comfortable in your ignorance than when you can see them right there on the screen鈥攔ight offshore.
Folks up here have said, “Jeez, I felt a lot more comfortable when I didn鈥檛 know these things were around.” Some don鈥檛 like to surf up here in the summer because it鈥檚 a psychological issue. We haven鈥檛 had an attack on a surfer ever, but last year we did have an attack on a swimmer. Up here, because the seals are drawn right up on the beach, those fears may be a little more founded than yours.

The other tags you鈥檝e put on sharks have been done without actually capturing them. But you helped tag Genie, the shark that pinged off Savannah, by getting her aboard the OCEARCH platform. The video of that capture was remarkable.
That was my first time tagging a shark that way. It was amazing. It鈥檚 probably the same feeling you would have looking at really big waves. It has to do with how insignificant it makes you feel. We put big, black towels over their eyes to keep them calm. Then, to see an animal in excess of 2,000, 3,000 pounds before your eyes, just laying there, docile like a big old St. Bernard, and being able to tag it, take tissue samples, test for parasites. It鈥檚 just remarkable.

How long is it safe to keep them on the platform?
Nobody wants to push it. OCEARCH is conservative. They say no more than 15 minutes. You could probably push it to half an hour, 45 minutes and the shark would be fine, but nobody wants to do that.

Are these eastern sharks as battle scarred as the ones you see out west?
We鈥檙e just finishing up some research that indicates that this species may live 70 to even 100 years. So these are big, old animals. You think of any big, old animal that鈥檚 dealt with the elements and survival鈥攅ven though they鈥檙e the top dogs in the ocean, there are other top dogs, too. And every time a shark goes after prey it鈥檚 taking a risk. So they鈥檙e going to be scarred up. I鈥檝e been down in a cage with them and it鈥檚 like looking at an old Navy veteran鈥攍ike Quint in Jaws鈥攚here you look at them and sort of ask, Wow, where did you get that scar?

Any surprises to you in the movements of these Eeastern sharks?
Well, almost all the information is new, and that鈥檚 the beauty of it. One of the things we found out from early tagging in 2009 and 2010鈥攚e knew that white sharks spend winters off the coast, anywhere from southern North Carolina down as far as Cape Canaveral. The classic thinking was that they move off the northeast and then to North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and then Florida, but in fact, the movement is not linear at all. Mary Lee鈥攕he moves from Georgia to South Carolina in a few days and just goes back and forth. It鈥檚 almost a random movement, and we鈥檙e just learning about all of it as we go along.

Chris Dixon is author of . He is more afraid of big sharks than big waves, but just barely.

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