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Great White Sharks Vanish From Cape Town, and No One Knows Why

Great white sharks, which support South Africa’s shark-diving industry, haven’t been seen in the region for 18 months.

Great White Sharks Vanish From Cape Town, and No One Knows Why
A Great White shark lunges to catch bait in front of the tourist’s shark cage of a tour boat off the coast off of Gansbaai, South Africa. (Photographer: Pierre Crocquet/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Great white sharks, which support South Africa’s shark-diving industry and have been responsible for a number of fatal attacks off Cape Town, haven’t been seen in the region for 18 months.

Between 2010 and 2016 staff at the Shark Spotting Programme, established to warn swimmers when the three-ton predators approached beaches, reported an average of 205 sightings of the fish off the beaches of False Bay. In 2018 that fell to 50 and this year not one has been seen. None have been seen at Seal Island, a one-time feeding ground off the coast.

“Further supporting evidence of the absence of these large apex predators is the lack of any feeding or bite marks on whale carcasses the city has removed from False Bay this year,” Cape Town’s municipality said in a statement on Wednesday. “We do not know how their absence from False Bay would affect the ecosystem. Neither do we know the causes for their disappearance.”

Great White Sharks Vanish From Cape Town, and No One Knows Why

Local media reports have postulated the arrival of pods of orcas, which eat sharks, in the bay as a reason for departure of the Great Whites and over fishing of fish that the predators target as prey.

To contact the reporter on this story: Antony Sguazzin in Johannesburg at asguazzin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: John McCorry at jmccorry@bloomberg.net, Pauline Bax

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