Tag Archives: Somniosus pacificus

Pacific Sleeper Shark (Somniosus pacificus)

The reclusive, deep-dwelling Pacific sleeper shark (Somniosus pacificus) remains an enigma to biologists. Once believed to be sluggish bottom-dwellers that scavenged or fed on small fish and slow-moving prey, researchers now think Pacific sleeper sharks play a pivotal role in the North Pacific’s food web. Biologist Lee Hubert with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game studies Pacific sleepers, and he has learned the sharks spend little time on the bottom but instead move continually through all depths and are stealth predators of fast-moving prey.

I can understand how Pacific sleepers earned their reputation as sluggish sharks. We occasionally catch immature Pacific sleeper sharks when we halibut fish, and when reeled up to the boat, they look dead and move very little. I was surprised to hear these sharks are voracious predators. This shark’s ability to remain still, though, is one of the reasons it is such a successful predator. When it glides through the water, barely moving its body, it minimizes hydrodynamic noise, allowing it to elude acoustic detection by its prey.

Pacific sleeper sharks dive to depths exceeding 6500 ft. (1981 m). They typically remain deep during the day and then move to the surface at night, where they feed under cover of darkness. These sharks probably have poor eyesight, but they are extremely sensitive to electromagnetic fields. They can detect even minute electrical signals, such as the beating of an animal’s heart or its diaphragm’s movement. The shark does not need vision to detect these signals and attack its prey. Its dark grey body and stealth movements make it an efficient predator under the cloak of darkness.

The mouth of a Pacific sleeper shark is large and acts as a vacuum to inhale prey. Fish, such as salmon and cod, can be swallowed whole, but the shark uses its teeth to aid in eating larger prey items. Its upper jaw has small, sharp conical teeth used to hold the prey, while the teeth in the lower jaw interlock, forming a serrated blade used for slicing. A Pacific sleeper shark’s bite resembles the shape of a three-quarter moon.

Because they make little noise when traveling, a sleeper shark attacks with little warning. It might slowly swim up underneath a seal resting on the surface and attack the seal’s midsection, inflicting a fatal wound. Researchers know Pacific sleeper sharks eat fish, squid, octopuses, and marine mammals, but they are still trying to discern how much impact these sharks have on the their ecosystem. The number of Pacific sleeper sharks has increased dramatically in the North Pacific since the 1980s. Because they live very deep much of the time, it is difficult for biologists to estimate their population size. Still, in many areas where commercial fishermen caught few sleeper sharks in the 1970s, they now catch many.

Investigators are particularly interested to learn how many marine mammals Pacific sleeper sharks kill and eat. Pacific sleepers can grow to twenty feet (6.1 m) in length and weigh more than 8000 lbs. (3600 kg). They grow nearly as large as an adult orca, and recent evidence suggests these sharks might eat endangered Steller sea lions, especially sea lion pups.

In a 2014 study, biologists inserted “life-history transmitters” into the abdomens of 36 juvenile Steller sea lions. These transmitters record temperature, light, and other properties during the sea lions’ lives. When a sea lion dies, the tags either float to the surface or fall out onshore and transmit the data by satellite to researchers. After 17 of the original 36 tagged sea lions died, researchers noted that 15 of the transmitters indicated that predators killed the sea lions. Usually, when a predator kills a sea lion, the tag is ripped from the body and floats to the surface, recording a rapid temperature change and exposure to light. Three of the transmitters relayed data that suggested a very different type of predator, though. They recorded an abrupt drop in temperature, but they did not float to the surface and sense light, indicating that tissue surrounded them. The apparent explanation is that a cold-blooded animal, such as a shark, had eaten them. Other than sleeper sharks, great white and salmon sharks are the only other candidates living in the area near where the sea lions died. But both great white sharks and salmon sharks have counter-current heat exchangers in their bodies, giving them higher body temperatures than those recorded. Biologists think a Pacific sleeper shark is the only predator in the area that is large enough to eat a sea lion and has a body temperature as low as those recorded.

Pacific sleeper sharks live in polar and sub-polar regions year-round. They range from Baja California north to the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas and the Okhotsk Sea off Japan. Biologists know little about Pacific sleeper shark reproduction and only recently learned they give birth to live young. Their social structure is also unknown, but researchers have photographed them feeding together in large numbers on whale carcasses.

Pacific sleeper sharks probably have a lifespan of more than forty years. Their tissue is toxic to humans and believed to be toxic to many other animals, so they have few natural predators except perhaps for other sharks.


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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