The Daily Telegraph

Great Whites could be coming to Cornwall

Scientists predict at least 10 new species of predator in next 30 years as sea temperatur­e rises

- By Jessica Carpani

Sharks, including great whites and oceanic whitetips, could be swimming off the beaches of Cornwall within the next 30 years, say experts. A new study has found that rising sea temperatur­es will encourage deadly predators that have previously avoided our icy shores.

DANGEROUS sharks, including great whites and oceanic whitetips, could be swimming off the beaches of Cornwall within the next 30 years, according to experts.

A new study, carried out by Dr Ken Collins, senior research fellow at the University of Southampto­n and a former member of the UK Shark Tagging Programme, found that rising sea temperatur­es will encourage exotic predators which have previously avoided our icy shores.

At least 10 new shark species are predicted to become regular visitors to Britain’s waters by 2050, including blacktips, sand tigers and hammerhead­s, which are currently found off the coasts of Spain and Portugal.

At the end of June, a great white was sighted near the island of Majorca for the first time in 40 years, and Dr Collins said the horror film favourite may already be swimming off the coast of

Britain.

The warming waters are expected to attract the oceanic whitetip which Jacques Cousteau described as “the most dangerous of all sharks” and which has historical­ly been responsibl­e for picking off victims of shipwrecks and aeroplane crashes.

The new study was initially based on sharks in the Pacific, which biologists noticed were staying for longer than usual off the coast of Australia.

And after switching his focus to the Mediterran­ean, Dr Collins said many sharks already migrate thousands of miles to reach Spanish and Portuguese shores, so it would only take a slight change in water temperatur­es to encourage them further north, and into Britain’s seas.

The English Channel has warmed by around 1C in the past 50 years and is expected to continue to heat up with climate change while a further global sea surface temperatur­e rise of 1.5C is predicted by 2050.

“One of the fish on my list is the bigeye thresher, which was caught off of Cornwall about 10 years ago,” he said.

“That’s exactly what you can expect to see: the occasional catches of more and more types of sharks. There is considerab­le debate as to whether we have great white sharks in UK waters.

“I see no reason why not – they live in colder waters off South Africa and have a favourite food source, seals, along the Cornish coast.”

Cornwall is already a hotspot for sharks, with 20 species already regularly inhabiting the coastal waters. But they can also be found off the coast of Devon, the Isle of Wight, Wales, and even as far north as Invernessh­ire and Argyllshir­e

Currently the UK has 40 species occupying its waters, including thresher, basking and nursehound sharks.

“I confidentl­y predict that we’ll have more different types of sharks, but less overall sharks because of fisheries, finning and pollution,” daid Dr Collins.

Other sharks that are expected to reach Britain by 2050 include the longfin mako, bronze whaler, the silky shark, dusky shark and goblin shark, which already migrate to the Mediterran­ean coast.

Most are currently described as vulnerable or endangered.

The research was carried out by Nat Geo WILD ahead of the launch of its new series Sharkfest.

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