Abstract
Shark nurseries are essential habitats for shark survival. Notwithstanding the rich fossil record of the modern great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias, GWS), its use of nursery areas in the fossil record has never been assessed before. Here, we analysed the fossil record of the GWS from three South American Pliocene localities, assessed body size distributions and applied previously established criteria to identify palaeo-nurseries. We found that juveniles dominate the Coquimbo locality (Chile), whereas subadults and adults characterize Pisco (Peru) and Caldera (Chile), respectively. These results, summed to the paleontological and paleoenvironmental record of the region, suggest that Coquimbo represents the first nursery area for the GWS in the fossil record. Our findings demonstrate that one of the top predators in today’s oceans has used nursery areas for millions of years, highlighting their importance as essential habitats for shark survival in deep time.
Subject terms: Palaeontology, Marine biology
Introduction
Shark nursery areas are essential habitats where young are born or reside, and where their growth is facilitated1. Generally, nursery areas are defined by the following criteria: there is higher relative abundance of juveniles and neonates compared to others areas; immature sharks must show a tendency to return and stay for long periods of time; they are used by immature sharks over years1,2; and they are geographically discrete zones that provide two main benefits: protection from predation and abundant food resources1. Although these criteria have been useful to identify modern nurseries3–11, some of them can be rather difficult to apply to the fossil record. Accordingly, nurseries areas in the geological past (herein palaeo-nurseries) have been proposed based on the criteria for modern species, but adapted to the fossil record (1) water-depth: they are shallow-water habitats hence offering young with protection from larger predators12 (2) productivity: they are highly productive habitats providing abundant resources and facilitating growth2 (3) preponderance of young individuals: they are heavily dominated by juveniles and neonates13–17. Identified shark palaeo-nurseries areas span widely chronologically, geographically, and taxonomically, e.g., hybodontiforms and xenacanthiforms from the late Triassic of Kyrgyzstan; lamniforms from the Palaeocene of South Carolina, USA; Otodus from the late Miocene of South Carolina; O. megalodon from the late Miocene of Panama; and Carcharhinus brachyurus from the late Miocene of Peru13–17. The finding of nursery areas in the fossil record suggests they have been essential habitats for some shark species throughout evolutionary time.
Nursery areas are considered to be crucial for the recovery and persistence of shark populations18. More recently it has been demonstrated that nursery areas are of utmost importance for maintaining sustainable breeding populations19–21. These have large and long-lasting effects on population size, secure the survival of shark species and influence the distribution of populations21. Additionally, these areas also limit the access of larger sharks and therefore decreasing the predation risk2. As such, the identification of nursery areas has significantly increased in recent years in an effort to mitigate of declines in shark numbers resulting from various anthropogenic activities and their impacts1.
The great white shark (herein, GWS) is a large, cosmopolitan, top predator22 and comprises six genetically distinct population from Australia/New Zealand, South Africa, Mediterranean, North West Atlantic, North East Pacific, and Japan23. It is also a highly migratory species that inhabits a wide range of marine environments, from very shallow waters of the continental shelf to oceanic waters and around remote islands, tolerating temperatures from 5° to 25 °C24. Its vertical distribution typically ranges from 0 to 250 m, but can extend down to 1200 m in some cases25. This species has been documented in aggregations around rocky reefs near pinniped colonies in northern California, eastern Australia, Canada and South Africa26–28. Its presence along south-eastern Pacific coasts is uncommon29–33. The GWS is a generalist feeder with increasing trophic levels through ontogeny34. Young-of-the-year (YOY; <175 cm) and juveniles (JWS; >175–300 cm) generally feed on teleost fishes, invertebrates and others sharks, whereas subadults and adults (>300 cm) commonly feed on aquatic mammals35. Despite its importance as apex predator for the stability of marine ecosystems, the GWS is currently considered vulnerable to extinction due to increased pressure in fisheries36. Current knowledge on GWS nursery areas is limited. However, several nurseries have been proposed from different regions around the world. For instance, in North America two large nursery area extends from the Southern California Bight (Point Conception to San Diego) to the Baja California Peninsula and from the New York-New Jersey Bight3–6. In addition, Bahia Sebastian Vizcaino (off central Baja California) has recently been identified as another important GWS nursery area7. In Europe, the areas around the Sicilian Channel and the Aegean Sea are reported as zones with high abundances of juveniles8,9. In the southern hemisphere, three nurseries areas have been reported from Australian and South African waters10,11.
The GWS has a rich fossil record37,38, but palaeo-nurseries have not yet been reported for this species. Here, we present the first evidence of palaeo-nursery areas and the body size distribution for the GWS from the Pliocene fossil record, specifically from Peru (Pisco Formation39) and Chile (the Bahia Inglesa and Coquimbo Formations40–42). Assessing the presence of its palaeo-nurseries could unravel more details about the evolutionary history the GWS in the south-eastern Pacific and in general, improve our understanding of past diversity and distribution patterns of apex predators.
Results
In total, we identified 48% (113 of 234) of teeth as laterals, followed by anterior (41%, 97 of 234) and intermediates (9%, 22 of 234). The most posterior teeth (L5 to L7) were less abundant amounting to only 15% (17 of 113) in all sites. In terms of the body size, our results showed TL ranging from 155–729 cm (Supplementary Fig. 2; Supplementary Dataset 1). Records from Caldera, Chile (27°S), included the largest specimen whereas the smallest individuals come from Coquimbo (29°S).
Our results show that the body size distribution for the GWS was significantly different among localities (Kruskal-Wallis test, p < 0.0001; a posteriori test, p < 0.006 between each pair of localities), with a smaller median value for Coquimbo (271 cm), followed by Pisco (350 cm) and Caldera (411 cm). While GWS juveniles dominated the Coquimbo population (Table 1), subadults were most common in Pisco and Caldera. Additionally, the others size categories also vary across localities (Table 1; Fig. 3). YOY are very rare in Coquimbo and Caldera, and are absent from Pisco. JWS occurred in the highest numbers in Coquimbo, followed by Pisco and Caldera. Based on the length of maturity (≥480 cm for females, ≥360 cm for males and ≥450 for undetermined sex)43,44, the highest number of adults occurs in Caldera, followed by Pisco and Coquimbo. Finally, Gaussian Mixture Modelling indicates the presence of two body size clusters each in Pisco and Coquimbo. In Pisco, the clusters indicate specimens above the size for JWS and the length of subadults and adults (Fig. 3a; Supplementary Fig. 3). In Coquimbo, the clusters indicate specimens within the body size range for JWS and the length of subadults females and adult males (Fig. 3c; Supplementary Fig. 3). In Caldera, only a single cluster is detected, the cluster indicates specimens within the length of subadults females and adult males (Fig. 3b).
Table 1.
Body size distribution of Young-of-the-year (YOY), juveniles (JWS), subadults and adult individuals of the Great White Shark (GWS) from the lower Pliocene of Pisco (n = 80), Caldera (n = 85) and Coquimbo (n = 69).
| Region | N° of specimens | % of specimens |
|---|---|---|
| (A) YOY (120 to 175 cm) | ||
| Pisco | 0 | 0 |
| Caldera | 1 | 1 |
| Coquimbo | 2 | 3 |
| (B) JWS (175 to 300 cm) | ||
| Pisco | 21 | 26 |
| Caldera | 11 | 13 |
| Coquimbo | 42 | 61 |
| (C) subadult males (≥300 to 360 cm) | ||
| Pisco | 50 | 63 |
| Caldera | 49 | 58 |
| Coquimbo | 20 | 29 |
| (D) subadult females (≥300 to 450 cm) | ||
| Pisco | 28 | 35 |
| Caldera | 21 | 25 |
| Coquimbo | 10 | 14 |
| (E) adult males (≥360) | ||
| Pisco | 31 | 39 |
| Caldera | 53 | 62 |
| Coquimbo | 15 | 22 |
| (F) adult females (≥480) | ||
| Pisco | 9 | 11 |
| Caldera | 22 | 26 |
| Coquimbo | 4 | 6 |
| (G) adults undetermined sex (>450) | ||
| Pisco | 9 | 11 |
| Caldera | 25 | 29 |
| Coquimbo | 5 | 7 |
Figure 3.

Frequency distribution of the estimated body length of GWS from (A) Pisco, (B) Caldera and (C) Coquimbo. Dashed lines represent the length of young of the year, juveniles, first maturity for males, females and species average.
Discussion
The GWS is the second most abundant chondrichthyan in the Pliocene of the eastern Pacific of South America (22%, 68 of 313 all fossil species occurrences in the region)45. However, this study represents the first attempt to assess the body size distribution and to identify possible palaeo-nursery areas for this species (Fig. 4; Supplementary Fig. 2). Based on the main criteria to define palaeo-nursery areas (high frequency of juveniles, food availability, and shallow-water depths)2 and the fact that YOY and JWS occur in similar locations and thus may share similar habitat requirements44 (Table 2), we propose Coquimbo as the first nursery area for the GWS in the fossil record.
Figure 4.
Extant (blue) and fossil (orange) nursery areas of the Great White Shark (GWS). 1, Coquimbo (this study); 2, Southern California Bight3–5; 3, Bahia Sebastian Vizcaino7; 4, New York-New Jersey Bight6; 5, Sicilian Channel8; 6, Aegean Sea9; 7, Algoa Bay10; 8, Port Stephen11; 9, Cornet Inlet11.
Table 2.
Criteria used to define a palaeo-nursery area for each locality.
| Locality | Bathymetry | Food availability | Dominated by juveniles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pisco | Shallow-Upper shelf52 | whales, phocids, dolphins, large and small fishes (chondricthyans and bony fishes)38,52 | No |
| Caldera | Shallow-Upper shelf57 | whales, dugongids, dolphins, phocids, large and small fishes (chondricthyans and bony fishes)41,54–56 | No |
| Coquimbo | Shallow-Upper shelf46,47,49–51 | whales, large and small fishes (elasmobranchs and bony fishes)40,42,46,47 | Yes |
The Coquimbo locality not only displays the highest percentage of JWS and the lowest percentage of subadults and adults (for both males and females: Table 1; Fig. 3c), but it is also characterized by a high abundance of other fish taxa (e.g., Heterodontus, Squalus, Myliobatis and Euthynnus lineatus)40,42,46,47 which represent potential prey for JWS35,48. In terms of water depth, the Coquimbo Formation has been interpreted as a shallow marine environment based on the presence of typically shallow-water invertebrates (e.g., Crassostrea and Incatella) and vertebrates (e.g., Thalassocnus and Heterodontus)46,47,49–51 (Table 2). The nursery area of Coquimbo thus would have offered to JWS abundant food resources as well as protection from larger predators.
In Pisco, our estimations indicate the highest frequency of subadults, absence of YOY and the presence of significant number mature adults (Table 1; Fig. 3a). Studies have shown that C. carcharias from Pisco formation cohabited with a high abundance of marine mammals as phocids, dolphins and whales39,52, being the target prey for larger subadults and adults GWS34,35. In terms of water depths, the depositional conditions of Pisco Formation have been interpreted as shallow to deep platform water, based on the presence of diatom and radiolarian taxa53. Given the absence of juveniles, the high abundance of marine mammals, and the shallow and deep-water depths (Table 2), we propose Pisco not as a nursery, but as a feeding area where subadult GWS had already switched their dietary preferences to marine mammals34.
Caldera displays the lowest percentage of JWS and the highest percentage of mature GWS (Table 1 and Fig. 3b). This locality is also characterized by high abundance of fossil marine mammals (phocids, dugongids, dolphins and whales)41,54–56. Furthermore, this locality is known for having a high abundance of the top predator O. megalodon45, which could be a potential predator for young GWS. Based on benthic foraminifers, the depositional environment of Bahia Inglesa formation has been interpreted as ranging from the littoral zone to the upper continental slope57. Considering the low percentage of JWS, the dominance of adults, the purported deep-water conditions, the high abundance of marine mammals and the presence of potential predators for young GWS (Table 2), Caldera seems to have been preferred by mature GWS and therefore may represent a feeding habitat.
Two other palaeo-nursery areas have been described in detail for other Neogene sharks from America16,17 following the three criteria used here. Pimiento et al.16 proposed the first evidence of a nursery area for O. megalodon from the late Miocene Gatun Formation in Panama. Landini et al.17 suggested a nursery area for the copper shark, C. brachyurus in the late Miocene of Peru (Pisco Formation). The nursery area that we proposed here displays a lower, yet comparable abundance of juveniles relative to the previously described nurseries (61% in Coquimbo vs. 88% in Panama vs. 84% in Peru: Table 1). The characterization of Pisco as a nursery area for C. brachyurus is surprising given the occurrence of possible predators.
The Pliocene epoch (5.33‒2.58 Ma), when it was comparably warmer than today58,59, has been proposed as the closest analog to anticipate the effects of ongoing greenhouse climatic warming60,61. Our results suggest that warmer sea surface temperatures may favor the existence of novel nurseries at currently temperate areas, re-shaping population dynamics and connectivity of the GWS with cascading efforts on local food webs. Thus, some areas may become new targets for marine conservation effort. New studies aimed at describing the location of past and present-day nurseries and the coupling with (paleo)oceanographic conditions, are needed in order to fully evaluate the future global climatic and oceanographic alterations on the population stability of the GWS.
Conclusions
The GWS, a top predator in today’s oceans, likely used the Coquimbo locality in Chile as a nursery, Pisco and Caldera as a feeding ground during the Pliocene. During this time, the GWS was more abundant in the south-eastern Pacific than it is today (Supplementary Table 1). Our results, added to the palaeontological and palaeoenvironmental evidence of the region, suggest that there were stable populations of GWS along the South American Pacific coast in the Cenozoic that recruited from at least one nursery area, raising new questions about the unusual presence for the modern GWS in the South Eastern Pacific population in contrast with the past.
Methods
Study area
The GWS has a fossil record that ranges from the lower Pliocene to the Pleistocene37,38. Our study is based on specimens from eight localities, one from southern Peru (Sacaco) and seven from Chile (Quebrada Camarones, La Cantera Baja, Quebrada Las Rosas, La Herradura, Mina Fosforita, Norte Bahia Caldera and Caldera: Fig. 1; Supplementary Dataset 1). Our sample set from Peru comes from the Sacaco locality (Pisco region, 15°S), which is part of the Pisco Formation. This formation ranges from the middle Miocene to the Pliocene39 and thus includes some of the oldest records of GWS. In Chile, the localities Caldera, Mina Fosforita and Norte Bahia Caldera (Caldera region, 27°S) belong to the Bahia Inglesa Formation. Recently, each major stratigraphic unit within this formation was dated using isotopes (87Sr/86Sr), giving a range from the middle Miocene to the lower Pleistocene49. The localities Quebrada Camarones, La Cantera Baja, Quebrada Las Rosas, La Herradura and La Cantera Baja (Coquimbo region, 29°S) are part of the Coquimbo Formation. Staig et al.42 proposed an age close to the middle Miocene-Late Pliocene for this geological formation. Due to the small sample sizes of fossil GWS teeth from certain localities (e.g., Norte Bahia Caldera), we treated the localities from the same region to a single locality (i.e., Pisco, Caldera and Coquimbo).
Figure 1.

Map showing localities of the fossil Great White Shark (GWS) from the lower Pliocene of the eastern Pacific of South America. 1, Sacaco; 2, Caldera; 3, Mina Fosforita; 4, Norte Bahia Caldera; 5, Quebrada Camarones; 6, La Cantera Baja; 7, Quebrada Las Rosas; 8, La Herradura.
Fossil data
We collected a total of 234 GWS fossil teeth: 69 from Coquimbo, 85 from Caldera and 80 from Pisco. Despite some uncertainties in the age of these lithostratigraphic units, all the specimens examined in this study are interpreted to have come from the Pliocene, because definitive Carchardon carcharias has not been recorded from pre-Zanclean rocks37 while exposures of post-Zanclean portions of those formations are limited45. Carcharodon hubbelli, that is interpreted to be a chronospecies with C. carcharias, is known from the late Miocene of Peru38, but all the teeth examined in this study exhibit well-developed serrations along the cutting edges of their crown characteristic of C. carcharias, (vs. C. hubbelli with weak serrations). Unlike most other Pliocene elasmobranch taxa with much smaller teeth that are easily overlooked during field surveys37, comparably large teeth of C. carcharias are generally readily noticeable in the field; thus, our collected sample sets of C. carcharias specimens that are represented by isolated teeth are assumed to represent random samples from different individuals of GWS.
Tooth measurements and fossil body size estimates
For each tooth in lingual view, we measured the crown height (CH), crown width (CW), root height (RH), root width (RW), and total tooth height (TH) (Supplementary Dataset 1; Supplementary Fig. 1). We then estimated the total length (TL) of each individual based on the CH. Teeth are often used to extrapolate the body size of the GWS62,63, where the use of the tooth crown height is known to provide particularly reliable estimates about the total length of the species. The application of this approach to fossil specimens rely on the assumption that tooth allometry has remained stable in time. To do so, we used the allometric relationship between CH and TL in extant GWS62 where every tooth position in the jaw corresponds to one regression equation that expresses its TL. We consequently determined the position of each fossil tooth based on the overall morphology of the crown and root using illustrations from primary literature64 and following the tooth type nomenclature of Shimada65 (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Dataset 1). We assumed sexual differences in tooth allometry, if any at all, to be negligible because decisive sexual dimorphism in tooth morphology is not known for GWS66.
Figure 2.
(A) Representation of tooth position within the jaw of the extant Great White Shark (GWS), (B) selected fossil specimens for each tooth position.
Body size categories and analysis
Based on the size and life stages proposed by previous studies43,44,48, we classified the GWS into seven categories: (A) YOY ranging from 120 to 175 cm TL; (B) JWS ranging from 175 cm to 300 cm TL; (C) subadult measuring ≥300 to 360 cm for males and (D) ≥300 to 450 for females; and (E) adult measuring ≥360 cm TL for males and (F) ≥480 cm TL for females. Despite the size differences in the onset of sexual maturity between males and females, 450 cm TL is regarded as an average adult length43,48. Using the TL estimates derived from fossil teeth, we calculated the proportion of GWS specimens using the length categories defined by Ferguson43 and Bruce44 as follows: (A) YOY, (B) JWS, (C) subadult males, (D) subadult females, (E) adult females and (F) adult males and (G) “undetermined sex”. This approach assumes that life-history of the GWS has remained stable in time (i.e., the size of first maturity of fossil and modern populations is the same). We also evaluated whether TL distributions were composed of single or multiple modes (i.e. suggesting multiple size cohorts). The number of modes of the frequency distribution of TL was statistically calculated using a Gaussian finite mixture modelling (GMM)67, which evaluates whether a mixture of several distributions combine to create an observed frequency distribution. A Bayesian approach was used to estimate the optimum number of clusters or distributions, from one to nine, where larger Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) values indicate stronger support for the model and number of clusters. Analyses were carried out using the library “mclust” in R68.
We defined the presence of palaeo-nurseries based on three main criteria: (a) the majority of specimens (>50%) are juveniles, (b) locality interpreted as shallow marine environment and (c) food availability (i.e. potential preys)16,17.
Supplementary information
Acknowledgements
We thank C. Varas, G. Roa, M. Guicharrause, J. Perez (Museo Paleontologico de Caldera); G. Cobo and M. Biskupovic (Museo Arqueologico de La Serena) and E. Maxwell (Staatliches Museum fur Naturkunde Stuttgart) for providing access to palaeontological collections. We deeply appreciate the constructive comments and logistic help provided by P. Oyanadel-Urbina, V. Castelleto, A. Alballay and M. Torrejon. Finnancial support for this study was provided by a Becas-Chile Scholarship, Advanced Human Capital Program of the National Comission for Scientific and Techological Research (CONICYT, Chile) and SYNTHESYS grant (DE-TAF). Open access funding provided by University of Vienna.
Author contributions
Conceptualization by J.A.V., C.P., and J.K. Data curation by J.A.V., A.A., K.S. and S.H. Formal analysis were performed by J.A.V. and M.M.R. All authors discussed results and commented on the manuscript.
Data availability
All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Footnotes
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
is available for this paper at 10.1038/s41598-020-65101-1.
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