I live right off that island I go over all the time I used to do kayak tours around that island that place is full of seals and sharks. When I seen the seals, all relaxed and in the water playing, I know there was never any sharks around but when they were all on the rocks, you knew there were sharks.
This video is not only visually stunning but also provides deep insights into their behavior and life in icy waters. Thank you, Nat Geo Animals, for sharing this
One of the biggest sharks ever caught was in Canadian waters, they follow the prey and can handle cold waters, depending on the season they'll go north, as long as there's no Orcas.
Ahh, that explains why the great whites don’t hang around Washington or BC, Canada. Orcas galore here. I spent most my life in Hawaii and great whites weren’t around there since the monk seals were endangered and rare. But the seals are back now and huge great whites are back visiting the islands. Glad I’m too old to be surfing over there anymore.
This was a great segment. Really fascinating the technology on how they track sharks and why they are migrating North. My 4-year-old son and 10-year-old daughter really enjoyed this episode. Thank you!
Here, on Guam... We, have beautiful local sharks called, ’Nurse-Sharks’ that live here in the Northern-eastern Marianas’ Islands, that swim past the shore line... - Joseph Thaddeus Cruz Castro
Sometimes they dont, its called animal torture. There is no significant benefit for humanity by tagging these beautiful majestic creatures, only a fancy video, cool story and of course a high 5.
so sad, thank you for clarifying. when i saw them just cutting the line and leaving the hook my heart broke for these magnificent creatures. terrible 😢
The eggheads have been tagging big GWS off the Maritime coast line for years now. A lot of sharks really don't mind severe cold at all. Go figure. Asheville will now be given honorary Canadian citizenship.😊
greenland sharks are not very photogenic--though I think divers have swam and filmed them in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence/Saint Lawrence Seaway in very shallow (and maybe 'brackish') water.
So far from accurate chief. Both seals and whites are protected and because of that protection their numbers are exploding and repopulating their natural ranges. Absolutely nothing to do with "global warming".
Population recovery. They have protected status in Canada and the US since 1996. They were always here before overfishing and a reduction in large pelagic fish , according to experts starting in the 1950's / early 60's Verified records from the 30's to the 70's , then nothing afterwards, then an increase in the early/mid 2010's in the Gulf of St Lawrence show this.
Ce n'est pas un drapeau français ou québécois, c'est un drapeau acadien. Ce drapeau a les mêmes couleurs que celui de la France mais il y a une étoile jaune dans le rectangle bleu. Le port de pêche est dans une région acadienne de la Nouvelle-Écosse au Canada. Le français y est encore parlé mais les accents sont très différents du Québec et pourrait rendre la compréhension difficile pour quelqu'un de l'Hexagone. Les accents de la langue française en Acadie sont très variés et différents de ceux du Québec. Aussi, le drapeau du Québec est d'azur avec une croix d'argent cantonnée de quatre fleurs de lys.
There is only 1 reason, conservation. The natural range of great whites is literally global provided a food source is present. Since measures have been put in place and they aren't being harvested their populations are growing and "repopulating" areas they have been fished out of. In the 80s, 90s, and early 00s the populations of Atlantic whites was extremely low and encounters were rare. In the last 15 years i encounter multiple whites every year now off NJ when fishing. Honestly they need to establish a harvesting program. There are beaches all along New England that you can't enter the water and it's only going to get worse. These "biologists" have eliminated the great whites main predator, humans.
I live right off that island I go over all the time I used to do kayak tours around that island that place is full of seals and sharks. When I seen the seals, all relaxed and in the water playing, I know there was never any sharks around but when they were all on the rocks, you knew there were sharks.
Saw.. saw the seals.
Learning about great whites in the North is so eye-opening. Absolutely fascinating!🤩
This video is not only visually stunning but also provides deep insights into their behavior and life in icy waters. Thank you, Nat Geo Animals, for sharing this
One of the biggest sharks ever caught was in Canadian waters, they follow the prey and can handle cold waters, depending on the season they'll go north, as long as there's no Orcas.
Ahh, that explains why the great whites don’t hang around Washington or BC, Canada. Orcas galore here. I spent most my life in Hawaii and great whites weren’t around there since the monk seals were endangered and rare. But the seals are back now and huge great whites are back visiting the islands. Glad I’m too old to be surfing over there anymore.
This was a great segment. Really fascinating the technology on how they track sharks and why they are migrating North. My 4-year-old son and 10-year-old daughter really enjoyed this episode. Thank you!
Occasionally we have had them reported along southern gulf of Alaska when our waters go through warm cycles.
Been waiting for another video for a while! Love this stuff❤
When he successfully tags a shark, Greg screams like the the guy at the sports bar who is way too into his team.😂😂
News flash, sharks follow their food source.
I love great whites. That is an incredible fish!
Absolutely stunning video.just awesome.Thank you
Magnetic poles shifting could be a part of this. Not just the sharks but the food they follow as well.
great production👌🏻👍🏻🙂
What do you expect when you enter the ocean?
30:40 I was like ohhh 😖
8:59 😮fish on 😊what a catch
Here, on Guam... We, have beautiful local sharks called, ’Nurse-Sharks’ that live here in the Northern-eastern Marianas’ Islands, that swim past the shore line... - Joseph Thaddeus Cruz Castro
nurse sharks are one of the best for educating cuz they tolerate aquariums and they are relaxed individuals.
Mostly fish eaters. Check out the teeth.
There's GIGANTIC tiger sharks, too.
seals are gummies for sharks
how are they getting the hooks out of the sharks mouths after they tag them?
Sometimes they dont, its called animal torture. There is no significant benefit for humanity by tagging these beautiful majestic creatures, only a fancy video, cool story and of course a high 5.
so sad, thank you for clarifying. when i saw them just cutting the line and leaving the hook my heart broke for these magnificent creatures. terrible 😢
your stitches dissolve
Ya that's not cool
The hooks are designed to rust out very fast.
I know that island well there sharks over there for sure I used to give kayak tours around that Island. I stopped because of the sharks
Sharks or Orcas you won't catch me in a boat that is smaller then a 40ft'er let alone swimming in that water.
Weve had big great whites here in mid coast maine for years
Awesome!
Oh wow this just came out. I searched up JAWS and this came up. SC native here.
Why Humans cant let these beautiful Creatures live their live...wihout these cameras and nonsens...😢
shark ocean lord
Nice wonderful
Great
Square waves in Cape Cod….RIP TIDES! No bueno!
🦈
The eggheads have been tagging big GWS off the Maritime coast line for years now. A lot of sharks really don't mind severe cold at all. Go figure.
Asheville will now be given honorary Canadian citizenship.😊
Greg Skomal is a publicity loving "scientist "he loves being in front of the camera
Clearly. The epitome of "everybody, look at meeee!!!".
Notice they are on the boat lol..
Cena narrating 🤣 CENATION
I knew I recognized that voice
But I thought Trudeau outlawed sharks!!
😍👍
What does a shark eat?
depends on the type of shark
anything rare.
Greenland shark?
greenland sharks are not very photogenic--though I think divers have swam and filmed them in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence/Saint Lawrence Seaway in very shallow (and maybe 'brackish') water.
Unprovoked who provoked a shark ever?
“Bad decision”? For whom?
Welcome my toothy friends
lack of prey in traditional habitats and warming oceans are driving the sharks North to find food in the way of seals and other pinnipeds.
No. I live in Newfoundland. They've always been here.
So far from accurate chief. Both seals and whites are protected and because of that protection their numbers are exploding and repopulating their natural ranges. Absolutely nothing to do with "global warming".
Population recovery. They have protected status in Canada and the US since 1996.
They were always here before overfishing and a reduction in large pelagic fish , according to experts starting in the 1950's / early 60's
Verified records from the 30's to the 70's , then nothing afterwards, then an increase in the early/mid 2010's in the Gulf of St Lawrence show this.
@@mannycheese1166 they were here in the 80's I've seen them while handlineing cod.
@
Yes, I agree, just not in the #'s today or pre 1970's when looking at incidents/records
I think sharks are like guardians of the ocean. They don't kill for fun like in the movies
Ain't the sharks fault. They're just acting normally in their natural environment.
🕶️
🦈⛵
I'd LOVE 💓 to take Megan 😍 fishing on a secluded island 🏝️
u only get the other one
5 min in, and im thinking its gonna be climate change.
Great whites are semi warm blooded..nothing weird about them being North
U say fish eaters ,blu3fin tuna that’s what 5he smaller ficpsh are eating small ,ask blue fin tuna fishermen that will tell u
Sharks are just silly guys
with the ocean being over fished sharks are venturing further than normal to find food
Categorically FALSE.
BLAME IT ON GLOBAL WARMING
I live in Newfoundland. They've always been here.
French flag at 15:35 🤩kudos to our cousins from Québec.
Ce n'est pas un drapeau français ou québécois, c'est un drapeau acadien. Ce drapeau a les mêmes couleurs que celui de la France mais il y a une étoile jaune dans le rectangle bleu. Le port de pêche est dans une région acadienne de la Nouvelle-Écosse au Canada. Le français y est encore parlé mais les accents sont très différents du Québec et pourrait rendre la compréhension difficile pour quelqu'un de l'Hexagone. Les accents de la langue française en Acadie sont très variés et différents de ceux du Québec. Aussi, le drapeau du Québec est d'azur avec une croix d'argent cantonnée de quatre fleurs de lys.
@@dffd1296 ah okay merci de la precision, je n'avais pas vu l'etoile jaune.
There is only 1 reason, conservation. The natural range of great whites is literally global provided a food source is present. Since measures have been put in place and they aren't being harvested their populations are growing and "repopulating" areas they have been fished out of. In the 80s, 90s, and early 00s the populations of Atlantic whites was extremely low and encounters were rare. In the last 15 years i encounter multiple whites every year now off NJ when fishing. Honestly they need to establish a harvesting program. There are beaches all along New England that you can't enter the water and it's only going to get worse. These "biologists" have eliminated the great whites main predator, humans.
Exactly. It's all population recovery.