Sharks in Alaska

Our guests are often surprised to learn sharks feed and swim in the frigid North Pacific. We catch spiny dogfish sharks when halibut fishing, and large salmon sharks terrorize commercial salmon gillnetters by ripping enormous holes in their nets when stealing fish from the mesh. Pacific sleeper sharks also live in Alaska’s waters, but sleeper sharks remain elusive, and biologists do not know much about their biology, diet, and habits. These three species fascinate me, and I think you will enjoy learning about their longevity, reproductive biology, and the mechanisms each species employs to stay warm in the frigid waters surrounding Alaska. I will cover each shark in detail in future posts, but for now, let me give you an overview of sharks in Alaska.

The three shark species I listed above are the most common but not the only sharks trolling the North Pacific. Over the past several years, ocean waters in the region have warmed, encouraging other shark species to venture into these nutrient-rich areas. Great white sharks began exploring Alaska in the 1970s, but recent, more frequent sightings suggest an increasing number of great whites have discovered the North Pacific’s fertile feeding grounds. Most of these visiting sharks only stay during the warm summer months, but researchers believe a small percentage find enough to eat to keep them in Alaska year-round.

Great whites are related to salmon sharks. Like salmon sharks, great whites have a highly developed countercurrent heat exchange mechanism that allows them to maintain a body temperature several degrees warmer than the ambient temperature. Sharks in this family represent some of the few species of endothermic fish in the ocean. Unlike their cold-blooded cousins, great whites and salmon sharks can produce bursts of speed to chase down prey, even in frigid ocean temperatures.

In recent years, Alaskans living and working in the far north regions of the Bering Strait and the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas have reported sightings of marine mammals with unusual wounds. Researchers noted that several ice-associated seals and Steller sea lions in the area suffered injuries from an uncommon predator.

Reports of seals with amputated flippers alerted biologists because killer whales have pegged teeth and don’t cause a slicing-type laceration. In some instances, scientists noted penetrating stab wounds and circular bite marks. Flesh torn by sharp, triangular teeth convinced researchers they were looking at the bite marks of a very large shark. Are the warming water temperatures and melting sea ice inducing great white sharks to travel further north where they can find a bounty of sea mammals to eat?

When great white sharks reach adulthood and grow very large, they seem to prefer eating marine mammals over fish, probably because marine mammals have a high energy-rich fat content. Observers have watched great whiles kill beluga whales in Cook Inlet, and biologists suspect they may even take walruses in the Bering Sea and the Arctic Ocean. Are great whites, at least in part, responsible for the diminishing numbers of Beluga whales? If the number of great whites increases in Alaska, will they affect other marine mammals’ population densities? Much more research is needed to answer these questions.

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I’ll take a closer look at my nemesis, the spiny dogfish shark, in my next post. We used to catch one or two of these nasty little critters a year during our summer fishing trips, but we caught as many as twenty per day this past summer. Is this increase in spiny dogfish a trend, or was this past year only an anomaly?



Robin Barefield is the author of four Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, and The Fisherman’s Daughter, and Karluk Bones. Also, sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska, and listen to her podcast, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier.


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