This Shark Can Walk on Land to Survive Its Extreme Habitat – Smithsonian Magazine

An epaulette shark in the South Pacific Auscape / Universal Images Group via Getty Images

While sharks that walk on land may sound like the terrifying plot of a Sharknado movie, a recent study examined a species that truly can move out of water. But its hardly a nightmare-inducing skill: The small sharks can scoot about 90 feet across the land.

Theyre not sprinting. There are no ankle-biters coming to get anybody, biologist Forrest Galante, who was not involved with the new research, told the Associated Press in July. Its just this fascinating behavior taking place.

Called epaulette sharks, these docile creatures pose little risk to humansbut theyre still considered the toughest shark on the Great Barrier Reef, Jodie Rummer, a marine biologist at James Cook University in Australia and co-author of the paper, tells USA Todays Orlando Mayorquin. The species may provide scientists with valuable information about surviving in harsh environments.

In the research, published in Integrative and Comparative Biology in July, scientists studied the mechanics of how these sharks move, comparing their gait as newborns versus as juveniles.They assert that walking on land might be a survival strategy prompted not only by the sharks naturally severe habitat conditions, but also by climate change.

"Epaulette sharks live at the extremes," Marianne Porter, lead author of the study and a biologist at Florida Atlantic University, tells Live Sciences Joshua A. Krisch. "If we want to learn what happens to animals under the extreme conditions of climate change, looking at animals already living under these conditionsand understanding how they move and copemay be the first step."

Epaulette sharks (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) are about 3 feet long with paddle-shaped fins they use to walk, whether across the ocean floor or on dry land. They live in shallow watersamid coral reefs in the western Pacific Oceanaround New Guinea and northern Australia. These hardy sharks can survive oxygen deficiency for up to about two hours, which helps them persist in their challenging habitat.

You might not think of beautiful, tropical beaches as harsh, but in reality, tidepools and coral reef environments are pretty harsh, subjected to warm temperatures when the tide is out and a lot of changes, Porter tells The Guardians Richard Luscombe. These little sharks can move from tidepool to tidepool, allowing them to access new pools to forage for food, or tidepools with better oxygenated water.

In the study, scientists hypothesized that changes in thesharks body shapes as they grow would affect how they move, per a statement. Newborn epaulette sharks draw nutrients from an internal yolk sac until theyre about a month old, which causes their bellies to bulge. Juveniles, on the other hand, actively forage for worms, crustaceans and small fish, so theyre more slender, the authors write.

"Shape generally impacts the way we move," Porter tells Live Science. "Human babies walk differently to balance their giant heads, and we assumed that baby sharks would wiggle their bodies and move their fins differently to accommodate their giant bellies."

To test their hypothesis, the research team examined sharks during three gaits of the animals in water: slow-to-medium walking, fast-walking and swimming. Surprisingly, they found that markers such as overall velocity, fin rotation and tail beat frequency remained the same for newborns and juveniles.

Further researchincluding looking into how these sharks walk on landcould provide more information about why these movements dont change as the sharks age, per Live Science. And, per the paper, future studies could determine how climate change may have impacted these sharks' walking behavior.

Understanding how these animals do it and how theyre so successful could teach us a lot about what is needed to be able to survive in the future climatic conditions that were supposed to see, Porter tells USA Today.

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This Shark Can Walk on Land to Survive Its Extreme Habitat - Smithsonian Magazine

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