UH researcher discovers deep sea sharks are buoyant

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Contact:
Carl Meyer, (808) 428-4819
Assistant Researcher, HIMB, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology
Marcie Grabowski, (808) 956-3151
Outreach Coordinator, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology
Posted: Jun 19, 2015

C. Meyer attaches an accelerometer to the pectoral fin of a sixgill shark.  Credit: Steve Kajiura.
C. Meyer attaches an accelerometer to the pectoral fin of a sixgill shark. Credit: Steve Kajiura.
A sixgill shark equipped with an instrument package returns to deep water. Credit: Mark Royer/UH.
A sixgill shark equipped with an instrument package returns to deep water. Credit: Mark Royer/UH.

 

In a study published recently, scientists from UH Mānoa and the University of Tokyo revealed that two species of deep-sea sharks, sixgill and prickly sharks, are positively buoyant – they have to work harder to swim downward than up, and they can glide uphill for minutes at a time without using their tails.

Conventional wisdom suggests that sharks are negatively, or occasionally neutrally, buoyant.  Sharks have cartilaginous skeletons, which are lower in density than bone, and they generate buoyancy via their large, oil-filled liver.  Despite these adaptations, most sharks are negatively buoyant and will sink if they stop swimming.  These sharks generate lift by swimming forward. It was previously thought that some deep sea sharks might be neutrally buoyant to save energy in their austere environment.

“We didn’t expect to find evidence of positive buoyancy, and ran two sets of experiments to confirm our initial observations of this phenomenon. This finding was a total surprise,” said Carl Meyer, assistant researcher at UHM’s Hawai‘i Institute of Marine Biology (HIMB) and co-author of the study.

Meyer and colleagues fitted sharks with an accelerometer data logger to measure the animals’ swimming performance as they swam up and down in their deep-sea habitat.  This device is like a flight data recorder for sharks, providing information about the shark’s swim speed, heading, tail beat frequency and body orientation. From this information, the researchers were able to determine whether the sharks were positively, negatively or neutrally buoyant. 

To provide additional insight into the habitats used by deep-sea sharks, the researchers deployed the first ever shark-mounted camera on a deep-sea shark.

“When I first downloaded the camera, I thought it had failed because all I saw were thousands of completely black frames,” said Meyer.  “Suddenly a string of images appeared with a brightly lit, alien-looking reef and strange deep-sea invertebrates.  I was elated and realized that the black frames resulted from the shark swimming around too high in the water column for the camera strobe to illuminate the seabed.”

These sharks live deeper by day than by night, and the cold water in their daytime habitat may cool their swimming muscles making them sluggish swimmers.  Positive buoyancy may be a physiological strategy enabling these sharks to exploit deep, cold habitats with limited food resources.

“We want to better understand why these sharks are positively buoyant,” said Meyer. “Does this trait perhaps give them a ‘stealth’ advantage during hunting, allowing them to glide motionless upward to capture prey above them in the water? Or does it help them with nightly migrations to shallower areas?”

With future studies, Meyer and colleagues hope to answer these questions by measuring the sharks’ muscle temperatures during their vertical migrations, and by fitting them with cameras in hopes of capturing on film active feeding.

For video footage, see the UH News story at http://www.hawaii.edu/news/2015/06/19/deep-sea-sharks-are-buoyant/. 

[VIDEO] Instrumented sixgill shark release

A sixgill shark equipped with an accelerometer and camera swims back down to its deep-water habitat.  

Credit: Mark Royer/UH 

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Itsumi Nakamura, Carl G. Meyer, Katsufumi Sato (2015). Unexpected Positive Buoyancy in Deep Sea Sharks, Hexanchus griseus, and a Echinorhinus cookei, PLoS ONE. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127667

For more information, visit: https://www.soest.hawaii.edu/