The Mercury News

‘Increase’ in great white sharks

Climate change: Warming waters have attracted juveniles off Aptos

- By Paul Rogers

Researcher­s have discovered a “dramatic increase” in the number of great white sharks swimming in Monterey Bay in recent years, including an area off Santa Cruz County where a surfer was killed last year, according to a new study published today.

Juvenile great white sharks — younger animals that are between 5 and 9 feet long — that traditiona­lly concentrat­ed in warm waters off northern Mexico and Southern Califor

nia have moved north since 2014 as water temperatur­es have warmed, the study found.

Where once there were no juvenile white sharks spotted in the ocean between Manresa State Beach in Aptos and New Brighton State Beach in Capitola, now there are dozens seen every year, according to research from scientists at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, Duke University and Cal State Long Beach. They swim there in groups between April and October, sometimes within a few yards of the shoreline and other features such as the “Cement Ship,” a dilapidate­d boat off a pier at Seacliff State Beach. The sharks have been photograph­ed regularly swimming near people, who often have no clue that the powerful creatures are so close by.

“I’ve seen sharks right

under surfers — just a few feet away,” said Chris Gularte, a helicopter pilot with Specialize­d Helicopter­s, a tour company in Watsonvill­e that regularly flies over the area. “When the water is warm and they come in the bay, you can see them swim near people all day long. Stand-up paddlers and kayakers will go right up to them and not realize they are there.”

Gularte said he has not seen sharks from his helicopter in more famous Santa Cruz surfing spots such as Steamer Lane in Santa Cruz or Pleasure Point near Capitola. He said he has seen increasing numbers of the sharks off the Salinas River mouth and in San Francisco Bay.

In one tragic interactio­n last May, surfer Ben Kelly, 26, of Santa Cruz, was bitten about 100 yards from shore at Manresa State Beach in Aptos. The bite occurred behind his right knee, hit an artery and he bled to death. An investigat­ion by state wildlife biologists

found the shark was at least 10 feet long, bigger than the juveniles that have mostly congregate­d a few miles north.

Researcher­s said in today’s report that such attacks are rare. The influx of young sharks into Northern California, they said, is indicative of broad ocean changes underway due to climate changes that are affecting many species.

“What’s been going on here has been really strange and different and unusual and not what we are used to,” said Kyle van Houtan, chief scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. “Monterey Bay is famous for cold water, kelp, otters, anchovies and whales. One thing that hasn’t been here are juvenile white sharks. But in the past five years or so that has totally changed.”

In Southern California, scientists last year tagged 53 juvenile great white sharks with transmitte­rs, said Chris Lowe, a marine biologist with Cal State Long Beach. The tags send

a signal when they come near four special buoys off Santa Barbara, Huntington Beach, Long Beach and San Clemente, and lifeguards on the beach receive a text alerting them sharks are in the area.

Lowe said he is working with officials from the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary to try to establish a similar system from Seacliff State Beach to New Brighton State Beach, an area locals increasing­ly call “Shark Park.”

He noted that great white sharks generally avoid people, and when they do bite somebody, it’s almost never a sustained attack. It’s a one-time bite, and then they leave.

“We really don’t know the motivation­s of the sharks when these things happen,” Lowe said. “At best we think the shark made a mistake — they thought they were going after a fish or a seal.”

After they are born, great white sharks stay in warm waters near the shore to feed on fish, rays and

squid, said Sal Jorgensen, a marine researcher with UC Santa Cruz and co-author of the study, which was published in Scientific Reports, a peer-reviewed journal from the publishers of Nature.

After two or three years, they grow larger than 10 feet long and swim out to deeper, colder waters. Their teeth widen and become more serrated. They reach sizes of 17 to 19 feet long and eat sea lions and other marine mammals, often in colder waters in places such as the Farallon Islands.

The “shark nurseries” where they grow have typically been south of Santa Barbara County. But after the Pacific Ocean off the West Coast warmed considerab­ly in an event known as “the Blob” in 2014, warmer conditions have moved northward, the scientists found. The warm conditions endured through El Niño events in 2015-16 and 2018-19 and continue today.

Tyler Fox, a pro surfer who has surfed in the Aptos

area for years, said he has noticed a change.

“People are spotting them more and more in the water there,” said Fox, publisher of Santa Cruz Waves magazine. “A couple of my buddies had one swim within 10 feet. The frequency of encounters has definitely increased.”

Fox said surfers he knows did not go back to the area off Manresa Beach after Kelly’s death. But now, particular­ly in the colder months when the sharks aren’t believed to be around, surfers have returned. He said he surfed there Sunday.

“There are always fluke situations, but I believe in that particular zone, they are cruising around, hanging out and getting warm,” he said. “They are not in hunting mode. They are not coming at you like you see in ‘Jaws’ with a fin coming straight at you. I think it’s fairly safe.”

Residents of San Jose are facing the worst phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hit our low-income communitie­s of color the hardest. It is no surprise that Latino, low-income and largely immigrant communitie­s are bearing the brunt of this public health and economic crisis.

We, along with our colleagues San Jose City Councilmen Sergio Jimenez and Raul Peralez, collective­ly represent the hardest-hit areas in the entire county, and we have worked tirelessly from the earliest days of this crisis to ensure an equitable response from the city that meets the needs of those families and communitie­s.

A commitment to equity has been at the heart of our efforts, and equity must also inform our state and local approaches to vaccinatio­ns. Recent headlines about vaccine shortages and scarce supplies being administer­ed to those with access and connection­s as opposed to need are unacceptab­le. We are also deeply concerned with the rushed and opaque deal over vaccine distributi­on that the state has made with Blue Shield, a large corporatio­n that is efficiency-oriented but not community-focused. This raises serious concerns about our state’s commitment to equity.

Relying on a large health care provider that does not traditiona­lly serve high-needs communitie­s is a strategy that will likely lead to an inequitabl­e rollout that ineffectiv­ely targets and reaches these communitie­s. Early statistics show that our communitie­s of color are being vaccinated at far lower rates despite having the highest case counts and deaths. We have the knowledge and capacity to prioritize vaccinatio­ns for those at the greatest risk of exposure, which is the most effective way to stop the spread of the virus and save lives.

San Francisco recently opened its first small-scale vaccinatio­n site in the Mission District, the hardest-hit neighborho­od in the city. This is the type of data-backed, equity-driven approach we need here in San Jose and is consistent with the approach we have taken as a city in responding to the pandemic.

Recognizin­g the nexus between race, poverty and the impacts of COVID-19, we have focused our efforts on addressing the needs of our most vulnerable residents. We brought forward a proposal for a paid sick leave ordinance to protect our essential workers and their families on March 12, 2020, four days before the implementa­tion of the nation’s first stay-athome order, and followed up in the following weeks and months with eviction and rent-increase moratorium­s, standing up two new emergency shelters and three bridge housing communitie­s, as well as working with the County Office of Education, East Side Union High School District and other partners on an $8.2 million digital inclusion plan to build out our East Side Community Wireless Networks and provide 11,000 mobile hotspots to underserve­d students and families. We also created and fully funded the Office of Racial Equity to substantiv­ely address issues of equity in city policies, programs and resource allocation.

Providing relief for those impacted the hardest — particular­ly tenants, essential workers and communitie­s of color — has been our goal. As we continue collaborat­ing with our Santa Clara County partners and advocating for our communitie­s at the state and federal levels during our vaccinatio­n rollout, we are committed to guaranteei­ng that those hurting the most are first in line for this muchneeded relief — so that all of San Jose can recover together. We call on all of our local leaders to join us in this effort to ensure that Gov. Gavin Newsom prioritize­s our hardest-hit communitie­s and not large corporatio­ns.

Relying on a health care provider that does not traditiona­lly serve high-needs communitie­s is a questionab­le strategy.

 ?? ANGELA HAINS — MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM ?? From left, Kevin Weng of the University of Hawaii, John O’Sullivan of Monterey Bay Aquarium and Chris Lowe of Cal State Long Beach tag a juvenile great white shark.
ANGELA HAINS — MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM From left, Kevin Weng of the University of Hawaii, John O’Sullivan of Monterey Bay Aquarium and Chris Lowe of Cal State Long Beach tag a juvenile great white shark.

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