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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:03,600 --> 00:00:06,240 NEWSCASTER: Shock and horror in a picturesque part 3 00:00:06,320 --> 00:00:08,520 of western Cape Breton tonight. 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:10,080 --> 00:00:12,360 NARRATOR: August 2021 6 00:00:12,440 --> 00:00:15,840 and Canada is rocked by news of a shark attack. 7 00:00:18,880 --> 00:00:21,520 NEWSCASTER: A 21-year-old woman from Cape Breton 8 00:00:21,600 --> 00:00:25,760 was airlifted to hospital after an apparent shark attack. 9 00:00:25,840 --> 00:00:28,200 NARRATOR: It's the first confirmed shark bite 10 00:00:28,280 --> 00:00:33,280 in Canadian waters in over 150 years. 11 00:00:33,360 --> 00:00:37,400 And just the latest in a number of mysterious shark sightings 12 00:00:37,480 --> 00:00:41,040 being reported right across Canada's Eastern Seaboard. 13 00:00:43,240 --> 00:00:44,760 MAN: Oh, no! 14 00:00:46,600 --> 00:00:49,440 NARRATOR: Is the Atlantic's most formidable hunter 15 00:00:49,520 --> 00:00:51,120 heading north? 16 00:00:51,200 --> 00:01:04,960 ♪ ♪ 17 00:01:05,040 --> 00:01:06,360 GREG SKOMAL: Have you ever been here before? 18 00:01:06,440 --> 00:01:08,280 MEGAN WINTON: To Nova Scotia? No, no, you? 19 00:01:08,360 --> 00:01:10,720 GREG: No. Never been here. 20 00:01:10,800 --> 00:01:16,240 ♪ ♪ 21 00:01:16,320 --> 00:01:18,200 NARRATOR: It's winter in Cape Breton, 22 00:01:18,280 --> 00:01:22,240 and the shark behind the attack has long since departed. 23 00:01:22,320 --> 00:01:24,080 GREG: This is pretty cool up here, huh? 24 00:01:24,160 --> 00:01:26,480 MEGAN: I mean, it's the dead of winter here right now, 25 00:01:26,560 --> 00:01:27,520 it looks like. 26 00:01:27,600 --> 00:01:29,840 I feel like I'm at the North Pole. 27 00:01:29,920 --> 00:01:33,800 NARRATOR: Now, shark experts Megan Winton and Greg Skomal 28 00:01:33,880 --> 00:01:36,680 comb the coastline looking for clues. 29 00:01:38,560 --> 00:01:39,960 GREG: Unprovoked attacks on humans 30 00:01:40,040 --> 00:01:41,880 are extremely rare events, 31 00:01:41,960 --> 00:01:46,480 and in particular this far north, almost unheard of. 32 00:01:47,880 --> 00:01:49,560 There's really just a handful of species 33 00:01:49,640 --> 00:01:51,240 that come here in the summertime. 34 00:01:51,320 --> 00:01:52,360 You know, you've got the basking shark, 35 00:01:52,440 --> 00:01:54,440 it eats plankton, you know. 36 00:01:54,520 --> 00:01:55,720 Forget that, right? 37 00:01:55,800 --> 00:01:58,760 You got porbeagles, which tend to be much smaller, 38 00:01:58,840 --> 00:02:01,480 very rarely, if ever, implicated in attacks on people. 39 00:02:01,560 --> 00:02:02,800 You got blue sharks. 40 00:02:02,880 --> 00:02:04,920 Yeah, they're relatively abundant in the summertime, 41 00:02:05,000 --> 00:02:07,840 but still they're not a dangerous shark. 42 00:02:07,920 --> 00:02:10,080 So in my mind, it really just leaves one culprit, 43 00:02:10,160 --> 00:02:12,760 and that's the, that's the great white shark. 44 00:02:15,560 --> 00:02:17,520 NARRATOR: White sharks have traditionally been seen 45 00:02:17,600 --> 00:02:21,400 as rare visitors to Canadian waters. 46 00:02:21,480 --> 00:02:26,400 Up until 2006, there had been just 32 recorded sightings. 47 00:02:28,200 --> 00:02:31,480 But in recent years, there have been more and more reports 48 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:34,440 of white sharks heading north. 49 00:02:37,480 --> 00:02:39,560 GREG: What are these white sharks doing here? 50 00:02:39,640 --> 00:02:42,200 What's drawing them this far north? 51 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:45,520 Those are the kinds of questions we're trying to answer. 52 00:02:45,600 --> 00:02:48,280 NARRATOR: Greg and Megan's goal is to put a camera tag 53 00:02:48,360 --> 00:02:52,840 on a white shark in Canadian waters for the very first time. 54 00:02:54,640 --> 00:02:57,680 If they can tag one, they may be able to learn 55 00:02:57,760 --> 00:03:01,080 why more sharks appear to be moving north. 56 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:05,280 ♪ ♪ 57 00:03:05,360 --> 00:03:06,240 MEGAN: Oh. 58 00:03:06,320 --> 00:03:09,400 GREG: Man, this is wild out here. 59 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:11,840 It's deep water between us and that island. 60 00:03:13,640 --> 00:03:15,320 NARRATOR: Off the island of Margaree, 61 00:03:15,400 --> 00:03:18,920 Megan uses a drone to survey the attack site. 62 00:03:22,120 --> 00:03:24,800 MEGAN: Oh, wow, look at that. 63 00:03:24,880 --> 00:03:27,720 Just beyond the snow, there's a bunch of seals. You see 'em? 64 00:03:27,800 --> 00:03:29,400 GREG: Yeah. 65 00:03:29,480 --> 00:03:31,000 Look at those, gray seals, right? 66 00:03:31,080 --> 00:03:32,680 MEGAN: I think so, yeah. Look at 'em. 67 00:03:32,760 --> 00:03:34,400 Big slobs, little pockets of them. 68 00:03:34,480 --> 00:03:36,120 GREG: Yeah. 69 00:03:36,200 --> 00:03:38,880 MEGAN: A lot of them. 70 00:03:38,960 --> 00:03:41,600 It's crazy deep, dark water. 71 00:03:41,680 --> 00:03:43,240 GREG: Yeah, it looks like it drops right off, 72 00:03:43,320 --> 00:03:44,840 right at the shoreline there. 73 00:03:44,920 --> 00:03:46,800 MEGAN: Perfect place for them to hunt. 74 00:03:46,880 --> 00:03:49,600 The seals wouldn't see 'em coming at all here. 75 00:03:51,600 --> 00:03:53,200 NARRATOR: Ambush hunters, 76 00:03:53,280 --> 00:03:56,360 white sharks like to surprise their prey. 77 00:03:58,200 --> 00:03:59,520 Hanging in the deep, 78 00:03:59,600 --> 00:04:02,240 their gray backs blend into the background, 79 00:04:02,320 --> 00:04:06,200 making them difficult for seals to spot from the surface. 80 00:04:07,720 --> 00:04:09,320 Their eyes are highly sensitive 81 00:04:09,400 --> 00:04:13,240 to contrasts between light and dark. 82 00:04:15,920 --> 00:04:19,120 Seals or swimmers silhouetted against the surface 83 00:04:19,200 --> 00:04:21,800 would stand out in vivid relief. 84 00:04:21,880 --> 00:04:32,600 ♪ ♪ 85 00:04:32,680 --> 00:04:36,360 GREG: I can't say with 100% certainty that this is, 86 00:04:36,440 --> 00:04:38,600 you know, an incident created by a white shark, 87 00:04:38,680 --> 00:04:41,120 but I'm, I'm very confident that it was. 88 00:04:41,200 --> 00:04:43,040 It's just a lot of evidence. 89 00:04:43,120 --> 00:04:44,520 There's plenty of seals here. 90 00:04:44,600 --> 00:04:47,240 The habitat is ideal for white sharks. 91 00:04:47,320 --> 00:04:50,440 We've got an eyewitness account. They saw a dark fin. 92 00:04:50,520 --> 00:04:51,760 You know, as far as I'm concerned, 93 00:04:51,840 --> 00:04:53,640 this was a white shark attack. 94 00:04:53,720 --> 00:04:55,760 And because it made a bad decision, 95 00:04:55,840 --> 00:05:00,440 it's likely it was a juvenile shark, an inexperienced shark. 96 00:05:00,520 --> 00:05:03,000 NARRATOR: Megan and Greg now believe they know 97 00:05:03,080 --> 00:05:05,360 what type of shark was responsible 98 00:05:05,440 --> 00:05:08,040 for the Canadian attack. 99 00:05:08,120 --> 00:05:10,120 But there are no signs of white sharks to tag 100 00:05:10,200 --> 00:05:12,720 in this near-freezing water. 101 00:05:15,040 --> 00:05:18,200 Every year, white sharks undertake huge migrations 102 00:05:18,280 --> 00:05:20,280 in the North Atlantic. 103 00:05:21,920 --> 00:05:24,880 It's February, and at this time of year, 104 00:05:24,960 --> 00:05:27,840 the relatively warm waters of South Carolina 105 00:05:27,920 --> 00:05:30,720 are a favorite winter destination. 106 00:05:32,600 --> 00:05:34,240 To catch up with the sharks, 107 00:05:34,320 --> 00:05:38,440 Greg and Megan are nearly 1,500 miles south 108 00:05:38,520 --> 00:05:41,080 in the town of Hilton Head. 109 00:05:41,160 --> 00:05:42,720 MEGAN: It's nice to be warm. 110 00:05:42,800 --> 00:05:44,880 GREG: Yeah. This is sweet. 111 00:05:44,960 --> 00:05:48,160 Well, I'm psyched to get out on the water here. 112 00:05:48,240 --> 00:05:49,960 NARRATOR: Greg and Megan's mission here 113 00:05:50,040 --> 00:05:54,440 is to catch and tag as many sharks as they can find 114 00:05:54,520 --> 00:05:57,880 and follow them north. 115 00:05:57,960 --> 00:06:00,040 The data could point them to where the white sharks 116 00:06:00,120 --> 00:06:03,920 are traveling to in Canada and why. 117 00:06:07,320 --> 00:06:08,360 To help find them... 118 00:06:08,440 --> 00:06:10,120 MEGAN: Hey, Chip! GREG: Hey, Chip. 119 00:06:10,200 --> 00:06:12,720 NARRATOR: ...Greg and Megan team up with Chip Michalove, 120 00:06:12,800 --> 00:06:14,240 who's been tagging sharks 121 00:06:14,320 --> 00:06:18,640 for Greg's Atlantic white shark study for the last six years. 122 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:19,720 GREG: Good to see you. 123 00:06:25,600 --> 00:06:28,760 NARRATOR: Chip leads the team 60 miles offshore 124 00:06:28,840 --> 00:06:31,440 where the continental shelf slips away 125 00:06:31,520 --> 00:06:34,280 to depths of over 300 feet. 126 00:06:34,360 --> 00:06:38,040 ♪ ♪ 127 00:06:38,120 --> 00:06:40,600 The deep water here is the perfect place 128 00:06:40,680 --> 00:06:44,400 for white sharks to ambush prey like dolphins. 129 00:06:44,480 --> 00:06:48,960 ♪ ♪ 130 00:06:49,040 --> 00:06:53,360 But the depth makes it difficult to tag. 131 00:06:53,440 --> 00:06:57,920 The only way to lure one up is using a baited hook. 132 00:06:58,000 --> 00:06:59,600 GREG: What the hell happens when we hook up? 133 00:06:59,680 --> 00:07:01,160 CHIP: Oh, my gosh, the adrenaline rush, 134 00:07:01,240 --> 00:07:02,600 through the roof. 135 00:07:02,680 --> 00:07:04,680 I'll tell you one thing, you sleep really good that night. 136 00:07:04,760 --> 00:07:05,920 MEGAN: Oh, my gosh. 137 00:07:06,000 --> 00:07:07,240 GREG: Well, I want to sleep really good tonight, 138 00:07:07,320 --> 00:07:09,200 which means I really want to get one of these fish. 139 00:07:09,280 --> 00:07:10,520 CHIP: Yeah. 140 00:07:10,600 --> 00:07:12,560 NARRATOR: As Chip prepares a white shark favorite 141 00:07:12,640 --> 00:07:16,480 of tuna heads, Megan readies two tags. 142 00:07:16,560 --> 00:07:19,000 MEGAN: So this is an acoustic transmitter. 143 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:21,920 This is a tag that will ping every minute or so. 144 00:07:22,000 --> 00:07:25,040 And whenever a shark swims past an acoustic receiver, 145 00:07:25,120 --> 00:07:28,800 which line the whole coast of the US and Canadian Atlantic, 146 00:07:28,880 --> 00:07:32,800 we'll get a date and timestamp of when that shark was there. 147 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:35,320 NARRATOR: The second device is a satellite tag. 148 00:07:35,400 --> 00:07:38,440 MEGAN: This logs light level information, temperature, 149 00:07:38,520 --> 00:07:40,360 and depth data for a year. 150 00:07:40,440 --> 00:07:42,120 And so we'll use this tag to figure out 151 00:07:42,200 --> 00:07:44,160 the broad scale movements of that animal 152 00:07:44,240 --> 00:07:45,360 over the course of the year. 153 00:07:45,440 --> 00:07:48,320 So together, this packs a huge punch. 154 00:07:48,400 --> 00:07:51,760 NARRATOR: All they need now is a shark. 155 00:07:51,840 --> 00:07:54,640 ♪ ♪ 156 00:07:54,720 --> 00:08:00,480 ♪ ♪ 157 00:08:00,560 --> 00:08:01,800 MEGAN: The dorsal just... 158 00:08:01,880 --> 00:08:06,320 GREG: Oh, yeah, see the dorsal? Dorsal's up. 159 00:08:06,400 --> 00:08:07,720 CHIP: You guys ready for this? GREG: Where is it? Where is it? 160 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:08,800 MEGAN: It's right, right here. 161 00:08:08,880 --> 00:08:09,960 CHIP: Right behind the boat, right here. 162 00:08:10,040 --> 00:08:13,560 MEGAN: Oh, my god, this is amazing. 163 00:08:13,640 --> 00:08:16,240 NARRATOR: Drawing a white shark in is one thing, 164 00:08:16,320 --> 00:08:18,520 but will it take the bait? 165 00:08:18,600 --> 00:08:20,320 MEGAN: They're coming in, coming in, coming in towards the bait. 166 00:08:20,400 --> 00:08:23,120 GREG: Coming to the bait. Coming to the bait. 167 00:08:26,680 --> 00:08:29,000 Ooh, shaking his head. 168 00:08:30,480 --> 00:08:32,080 Shaking his head. 169 00:08:34,200 --> 00:08:36,080 I've reeled in a lot of big fish in my life, 170 00:08:36,160 --> 00:08:38,760 big tunas, couple of marlin. 171 00:08:38,840 --> 00:08:42,400 And this, this is different. 172 00:08:42,480 --> 00:08:46,640 Feels like I'm trying to stop a truck. 173 00:08:46,720 --> 00:08:48,560 Oh, look at that fish. 174 00:08:48,640 --> 00:08:50,200 Wow. 175 00:08:50,280 --> 00:08:52,200 That's no small fish. 176 00:08:54,040 --> 00:08:54,920 MEGAN: Yeah. Yeah. 177 00:08:55,000 --> 00:08:57,800 CHIP: Alright. Meg, off you go. 178 00:08:57,880 --> 00:08:59,120 GREG: Oh, my god. MEGAN: I can't-- 179 00:08:59,200 --> 00:09:00,520 CHIP: Game on! Game on! 180 00:09:00,600 --> 00:09:02,040 GREG: You can do it, Meg. 181 00:09:03,680 --> 00:09:05,360 MEGAN: Oh, my god. 182 00:09:07,280 --> 00:09:11,240 NARRATOR: At nine feet long, it's a juvenile female. 183 00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:14,480 A perfect candidate for Megan's tag. 184 00:09:16,000 --> 00:09:17,960 CHIP: Yeah! GREG: Yes! 185 00:09:18,040 --> 00:09:22,080 CHIP: Yeah ha ha! Nice! Nice work! Yeah! 186 00:09:24,560 --> 00:09:27,600 NARRATOR: Tag on, the shark they've named Reese 187 00:09:27,680 --> 00:09:32,440 is the 283rd individual to join the biggest study 188 00:09:32,520 --> 00:09:37,040 of white sharks in the Atlantic. 189 00:09:37,120 --> 00:09:40,520 While her satellite tag will detach in a year's time, 190 00:09:40,600 --> 00:09:44,280 the small acoustic pinger will continue to track her movements 191 00:09:44,360 --> 00:09:48,040 for another 10 years. 192 00:09:48,120 --> 00:09:51,480 Where Reese heads in the coming months will help Greg and Megan 193 00:09:51,560 --> 00:09:53,720 build a unique picture of the movements 194 00:09:53,800 --> 00:09:57,960 of Atlantic white sharks, 195 00:09:58,040 --> 00:10:01,880 and if shark Reese has a preference for Canada. 196 00:10:01,960 --> 00:10:16,280 ♪ ♪ 197 00:10:16,360 --> 00:10:21,440 Over the next few weeks, Chip tags seven more white sharks, 198 00:10:21,520 --> 00:10:23,640 bringing the total number of Carolina sharks 199 00:10:23,720 --> 00:10:26,720 tagged this winter to eight. 200 00:10:29,600 --> 00:10:33,920 Over the next three months, all eight head north. 201 00:10:34,000 --> 00:10:35,720 A network of thousands 202 00:10:35,800 --> 00:10:37,320 of listening stations 203 00:10:37,400 --> 00:10:39,840 log the signal from their tags. 204 00:10:44,680 --> 00:10:48,840 As the sharks move north, they head towards cooler water. 205 00:10:51,280 --> 00:10:54,040 White sharks are the members of an elite family 206 00:10:54,120 --> 00:10:58,240 of five shark species known as the lamnids. 207 00:10:59,960 --> 00:11:02,280 ♪ ♪ 208 00:11:02,360 --> 00:11:04,520 While most sharks are cold-blooded, 209 00:11:04,600 --> 00:11:07,600 lamnids have evolved the ability to keep their bodies 210 00:11:07,680 --> 00:11:10,480 warmer than the surrounding water. 211 00:11:12,200 --> 00:11:15,320 They can capture the heat they generate as they swim 212 00:11:15,400 --> 00:11:17,200 and keep it in their bodies 213 00:11:17,280 --> 00:11:19,880 through specialized blood vessels. 214 00:11:22,880 --> 00:11:26,920 It's a superpower that allows them to thrive in waters 215 00:11:27,000 --> 00:11:30,760 off limits to most of their cold-blooded cousins. 216 00:11:30,840 --> 00:11:38,920 ♪ ♪ 217 00:11:39,000 --> 00:11:42,360 By June, sharks Josiah and Barnacle Ben 218 00:11:42,440 --> 00:11:44,840 reach Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 219 00:11:44,920 --> 00:11:47,760 the white shark capital of the Atlantic. 220 00:11:47,840 --> 00:11:51,960 ♪ ♪ 221 00:11:52,040 --> 00:11:55,080 Every year, hundreds of white sharks gather 222 00:11:55,160 --> 00:11:57,800 to feed on the huge seal colonies 223 00:11:57,880 --> 00:11:59,920 that pepper the coastline here. 224 00:12:00,000 --> 00:12:02,680 (seals barking) 225 00:12:02,760 --> 00:12:05,760 GREG: Seals are constantly coming and going, you know, 226 00:12:05,840 --> 00:12:09,600 but estimates have been anywhere up to 50,000 seals 227 00:12:09,680 --> 00:12:12,240 in that region during the summertime. 228 00:12:12,320 --> 00:12:14,640 So it makes sense that a lot of white sharks 229 00:12:14,720 --> 00:12:17,040 will come to Cape Cod. 230 00:12:17,120 --> 00:12:18,880 NARRATOR: Greg has spent the last decade 231 00:12:18,960 --> 00:12:23,200 studying great whites in these waters. 232 00:12:23,280 --> 00:12:26,360 He's discovered they like to hunt close to shore 233 00:12:26,440 --> 00:12:30,040 in water as shallow as a few feet. 234 00:12:30,120 --> 00:12:32,360 SPOTTER: Hey, John, I got one down here, 235 00:12:32,440 --> 00:12:35,200 north end of Monomoy, I'm circling now. 236 00:12:35,280 --> 00:12:39,400 NARRATOR: Tagging sharks is much easier here. 237 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:43,800 The water is so shallow, Greg uses eyes in the sky 238 00:12:43,880 --> 00:12:46,600 to spot the sharks from the air. 239 00:12:46,680 --> 00:12:48,920 There's no need for a hook. 240 00:12:49,000 --> 00:12:50,240 SPOTTER: So, it's 10:30 and a boat and a half, 241 00:12:50,320 --> 00:12:51,800 you'll probably see 'em. 242 00:12:51,880 --> 00:12:53,200 GREG: He's on the port side. 243 00:12:53,280 --> 00:12:55,440 CHIP: Alright, let's get ready here. 244 00:13:03,000 --> 00:13:04,200 GREG: Yeah! CHIP: Yeah! 245 00:13:04,280 --> 00:13:06,240 GREG: That's how it's done! 246 00:13:11,960 --> 00:13:15,480 NARRATOR: By the end of July, 12 more sharks are tagged, 247 00:13:15,560 --> 00:13:18,800 bringing the total in the Atlantic white shark database 248 00:13:18,880 --> 00:13:22,320 to 560. 249 00:13:22,400 --> 00:13:24,120 But despite the almost limitless 250 00:13:24,200 --> 00:13:26,680 amount of seals on offer, 251 00:13:26,760 --> 00:13:31,760 several tagged sharks choose to leave the Cape and head north. 252 00:13:31,840 --> 00:13:36,040 ♪ ♪ 253 00:13:36,120 --> 00:13:38,360 They're soon joined by shark Reese 254 00:13:38,440 --> 00:13:39,880 and her fellow South Carolina 255 00:13:39,960 --> 00:13:42,640 sharks Pavel, Sicklefin, 256 00:13:42,720 --> 00:13:44,280 and Eddie, who bypassed 257 00:13:44,360 --> 00:13:46,160 Cape Cod altogether 258 00:13:46,240 --> 00:13:47,240 on their way up towards 259 00:13:47,320 --> 00:13:49,000 the Canadian border. 260 00:13:52,960 --> 00:13:56,240 ♪ ♪ 261 00:13:56,320 --> 00:13:59,120 To find out what's drawing them to Canada, 262 00:13:59,200 --> 00:14:03,440 Greg and Megan follow the sharks back over the border. 263 00:14:06,440 --> 00:14:09,360 Their mission remains to find a white shark 264 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:11,680 and deploy the first-ever camera tag 265 00:14:11,760 --> 00:14:14,880 on the back of one in Canadian waters. 266 00:14:16,760 --> 00:14:18,480 GREG: Canada's gonna be a lot different 267 00:14:18,560 --> 00:14:20,240 from what Megan and I are used to. 268 00:14:20,320 --> 00:14:21,920 You know, we go to Cape Cod. 269 00:14:22,000 --> 00:14:25,760 It's a fairly small area, shallow water, 270 00:14:25,840 --> 00:14:27,480 lots of white sharks. 271 00:14:27,560 --> 00:14:30,600 Up here, much different. 272 00:14:30,680 --> 00:14:32,400 You know, lots of space. 273 00:14:32,480 --> 00:14:35,080 Finding them is gonna be pretty tricky. 274 00:14:38,440 --> 00:14:39,920 NARRATOR: Their first destination 275 00:14:40,000 --> 00:14:43,040 is the southern tip of the Nova Scotian Peninsula. 276 00:14:43,120 --> 00:14:47,600 Some 300 miles south of the suspected white shark attack. 277 00:14:49,800 --> 00:14:53,440 Last year over 20 different white sharks were detected 278 00:14:53,520 --> 00:14:58,040 on the listening stations in the area. 279 00:14:58,120 --> 00:15:00,600 And local fishermen also report 280 00:15:00,680 --> 00:15:02,400 an increase in sightings here. 281 00:15:02,480 --> 00:15:04,800 ONLOOKER: Oh, no! 282 00:15:04,880 --> 00:15:07,480 (seals barking) 283 00:15:15,320 --> 00:15:16,840 HEATHER BOWLBY: Welcome to Nova Scotia! 284 00:15:16,920 --> 00:15:18,080 GREG: Finally. A little chilly. 285 00:15:18,160 --> 00:15:19,320 HEATHER: How was the drive up? 286 00:15:19,400 --> 00:15:21,160 NARRATOR: At the small harbor of Wedgeport, 287 00:15:21,240 --> 00:15:23,800 Greg and Megan meet Canadian shark experts 288 00:15:23,880 --> 00:15:25,960 Heather Bowlby and Warren Joyce. 289 00:15:26,040 --> 00:15:28,680 GREG: Awesome, awesome. You got a spot for us to go? 290 00:15:28,760 --> 00:15:30,640 WARREN JOYCE: I think so, yeah. GREG: Let's give it a shot. 291 00:15:30,720 --> 00:15:32,040 WARREN: Yeah. HEATHER: Yeah. 292 00:15:32,120 --> 00:15:33,320 NARRATOR: Heather and Warren have been investigating 293 00:15:33,400 --> 00:15:37,040 Canadian white shark sightings for over five years. 294 00:15:37,120 --> 00:15:38,760 HEATHER: We're really excited that Greg and Megan 295 00:15:38,840 --> 00:15:41,320 were able to come up this year. 296 00:15:41,400 --> 00:15:45,880 We only know snippets about white sharks in Canada. 297 00:15:45,960 --> 00:15:47,920 We're still trying to work out why they're here, 298 00:15:48,000 --> 00:15:50,160 what they're doing while they're here, 299 00:15:50,240 --> 00:15:52,440 and the places that they frequent. 300 00:15:52,520 --> 00:15:54,720 So it's an open field. 301 00:15:54,800 --> 00:15:56,920 There's, there's a lot to answer. 302 00:15:59,240 --> 00:16:00,760 NARRATOR: As they head out, 303 00:16:00,840 --> 00:16:03,400 Warren and the skipper, Eric Jacquard, 304 00:16:03,480 --> 00:16:06,040 decide where to start their hunt. 305 00:16:06,120 --> 00:16:07,840 ERIC JACQUARD: We've had reports on sightings 306 00:16:07,920 --> 00:16:08,920 the last couple weeks, 307 00:16:09,000 --> 00:16:11,840 and then we've seen, actually seen the fish, 308 00:16:11,920 --> 00:16:13,880 Saturday and Sunday here... WARREN: Right. 309 00:16:13,960 --> 00:16:16,480 ERIC: ...ourselves, so, so they're around. 310 00:16:16,560 --> 00:16:18,320 WARREN: They're around. Okay. 311 00:16:18,400 --> 00:16:20,000 Well, let's hope we, let's hope we get one today. 312 00:16:20,080 --> 00:16:21,800 ERIC: That's right. Copy, copy. 313 00:16:21,880 --> 00:16:27,800 ♪ ♪ 314 00:16:27,880 --> 00:16:31,720 We've all seen great whites in the area. 315 00:16:31,800 --> 00:16:36,080 One of our friends was traveling from, from the island to home, 316 00:16:36,160 --> 00:16:42,560 and, uh, he did, he did see an actual seal bit in half. 317 00:16:45,680 --> 00:16:47,000 And then another friend of ours, 318 00:16:47,080 --> 00:16:51,800 he actually seen the shark throw the seal up in the air. 319 00:16:55,640 --> 00:16:58,960 There's been a lot of interesting sightings, 320 00:16:59,040 --> 00:17:04,480 seems to be more and more common these last few years. 321 00:17:04,560 --> 00:17:08,200 Seems to be a growing, a growing concern. 322 00:17:15,280 --> 00:17:16,960 NARRATOR: Five miles from harbor, 323 00:17:17,040 --> 00:17:18,880 Megan preps a brand new kit 324 00:17:18,960 --> 00:17:22,840 that could reveal why white sharks are here. 325 00:17:22,920 --> 00:17:28,120 MEGAN: So this is my favorite shark spy tool at the moment. 326 00:17:28,200 --> 00:17:30,800 This tag is outfitted with a bunch of different sensors 327 00:17:30,880 --> 00:17:33,600 that will tell us exactly how the shark is moving 328 00:17:33,680 --> 00:17:36,680 and navigating its environment 20 times a second, 329 00:17:36,760 --> 00:17:37,920 which is absolutely 330 00:17:38,000 --> 00:17:40,240 an incredible amount of information. 331 00:17:40,320 --> 00:17:43,560 The best part about this tag, though, what I love about it, 332 00:17:43,640 --> 00:17:47,080 is it has a camera in it that allows us to see what the shark 333 00:17:47,160 --> 00:17:49,760 is doing the whole time it's on the animal. 334 00:17:49,840 --> 00:17:52,320 It's gonna be a real game-changer for us 335 00:17:52,400 --> 00:17:56,000 in terms of figuring out how they use Canadian waters. 336 00:17:58,640 --> 00:18:00,160 NARRATOR: To attach the new tag, 337 00:18:00,240 --> 00:18:04,160 they need to get within 10 feet of the shark. 338 00:18:04,240 --> 00:18:09,440 But first, they have the huge challenge of drawing one in. 339 00:18:09,520 --> 00:18:11,600 There's been less than 100 confirmed sightings 340 00:18:11,680 --> 00:18:14,840 in Canada since records began. 341 00:18:18,080 --> 00:18:19,840 To tempt a white shark close, 342 00:18:19,920 --> 00:18:22,960 the team depends on baited lines. 343 00:18:28,760 --> 00:18:31,240 White sharks have one of the most sensitive noses 344 00:18:31,320 --> 00:18:33,080 in the ocean. 345 00:18:35,760 --> 00:18:38,400 It's thought 14% of their brains 346 00:18:38,480 --> 00:18:41,880 are dedicated to processing smells. 347 00:18:41,960 --> 00:18:43,720 Will any pick up the scent? 348 00:18:48,400 --> 00:18:49,760 NARRATOR: 2:00 PM, 349 00:18:49,840 --> 00:18:52,720 and the oils leaching off the three buoyed bait lines 350 00:18:52,800 --> 00:18:56,760 now create a slick several miles long. 351 00:18:56,840 --> 00:18:58,160 GREG: The water's super deep. 352 00:18:58,240 --> 00:19:00,080 We can't use a spotter plane to find them, 353 00:19:00,160 --> 00:19:03,440 because the sharks get down a few feet and we can't see 'em. 354 00:19:03,520 --> 00:19:05,400 So in order to get 'em, we got to entice 'em. 355 00:19:05,480 --> 00:19:09,280 Get 'em in tight so we can tag 'em. 356 00:19:09,360 --> 00:19:12,600 NARRATOR: Minutes turns into hours, 357 00:19:12,680 --> 00:19:15,800 and there's still no movements on the buoys. 358 00:19:19,120 --> 00:19:22,080 Then, eight hours into the operation... 359 00:19:22,160 --> 00:19:24,640 WARREN: Whoa, whoa, whoa, we got something! 360 00:19:24,720 --> 00:19:25,640 MEGAN: Which one's it on? 361 00:19:25,720 --> 00:19:27,560 WARREN: Number two, number two. 362 00:19:27,640 --> 00:19:29,240 NARRATOR: A white shark takes the bait. 363 00:19:29,320 --> 00:19:30,360 MEGAN: Yup, there it goes! 364 00:19:30,440 --> 00:19:32,400 Shark right in the middle! 365 00:19:32,480 --> 00:19:35,120 GREG: There it goes, there it goes. There it goes. 366 00:19:35,200 --> 00:19:38,040 Okay. Alright. 367 00:19:38,120 --> 00:19:42,640 NARRATOR: To find a white shark on their first day is huge. 368 00:19:42,720 --> 00:19:44,480 Heather and Warren have only ever tagged 369 00:19:44,560 --> 00:19:48,560 one white shark a year in Canada. 370 00:19:48,640 --> 00:19:50,600 GREG: Bottom of the ninth. Two outs. 371 00:19:50,680 --> 00:19:52,040 MEGAN: This is how we roll. 372 00:19:52,120 --> 00:19:54,320 NARRATOR: They now need to pull in the bait lines 373 00:19:54,400 --> 00:19:56,360 to get the shark close enough to tag. 374 00:19:56,440 --> 00:19:58,480 MEGAN: Okay, bring it, bring it in a little bit. 375 00:19:58,560 --> 00:20:00,720 NARRATOR: Unlike in South Carolina, 376 00:20:00,800 --> 00:20:05,040 there's no hook, just the bait to keep the shark interested. 377 00:20:05,120 --> 00:20:06,880 GREG: You're teasing him right up. 378 00:20:06,960 --> 00:20:08,480 MEGAN: Near three. 379 00:20:08,560 --> 00:20:09,680 Now let him come back. 380 00:20:09,760 --> 00:20:12,000 GREG: Alright. MEGAN: Tie off. 381 00:20:12,080 --> 00:20:14,800 Keep coming, keep coming! He's interested. 382 00:20:14,880 --> 00:20:18,080 So let's see if he'll come for two of the close ones. 383 00:20:20,840 --> 00:20:22,320 GREG: Look at that. See him up there? 384 00:20:22,400 --> 00:20:26,360 See him up there? Yup. He's off here. 385 00:20:26,440 --> 00:20:28,760 MEGAN: Yeah, yeah, there goes! 386 00:20:30,400 --> 00:20:31,800 Diving. 387 00:20:31,880 --> 00:20:34,160 GREG: Get ready for an ambush. There he goes. There he goes. 388 00:20:34,240 --> 00:20:36,320 He, he came right back. Look at that. 389 00:20:36,400 --> 00:20:37,880 MEGAN: He's coming, he's coming! 390 00:20:37,960 --> 00:20:51,520 ♪ ♪ 391 00:20:51,600 --> 00:20:56,840 NARRATOR: But after one last look at the bait, 392 00:20:56,920 --> 00:21:00,800 the white shark moves off into the deep. 393 00:21:00,880 --> 00:21:05,320 ♪ ♪ 394 00:21:05,400 --> 00:21:07,080 GREG: Pretty sneaky little critter there. 395 00:21:07,160 --> 00:21:08,160 So, I mean, the good news is 396 00:21:08,240 --> 00:21:09,680 there's, there's white sharks here. 397 00:21:09,760 --> 00:21:11,840 The bad news is we can't get 'em close enough to tag. 398 00:21:11,920 --> 00:21:14,360 But we hope that changes. 399 00:21:17,880 --> 00:21:19,440 NARRATOR: Heading back to shore, 400 00:21:19,520 --> 00:21:21,200 the team review the footage 401 00:21:21,280 --> 00:21:23,840 from cameras mounted on the bait lines. 402 00:21:23,920 --> 00:21:26,240 MEGAN: Chh chh chh chh chh. 403 00:21:26,320 --> 00:21:30,320 Oh, that's such a good one! 404 00:21:30,400 --> 00:21:33,880 HEATHER: So that's when the buoy went down. You on to that, Meg? 405 00:21:33,960 --> 00:21:35,280 GREG: Look at that. 406 00:21:35,360 --> 00:21:38,040 MEGAN: Oh, it really wanted that thing. This is awesome. 407 00:21:38,120 --> 00:21:40,360 GREG: Oh, it tears it up. 408 00:21:40,440 --> 00:21:42,360 NARRATOR: With no claspers visible, 409 00:21:42,440 --> 00:21:44,880 the shark is a juvenile female 410 00:21:44,960 --> 00:21:47,840 and new to the Atlantic white shark database. 411 00:21:47,920 --> 00:21:51,320 MEGAN: I think we put this one at like nine. Right? 412 00:21:51,400 --> 00:21:52,840 HEATHER: I've, yeah, I think so, too. 413 00:21:52,920 --> 00:21:54,960 MEGAN: A nine or ten-footer, so not a super big one, 414 00:21:55,040 --> 00:21:58,680 still a big shark, but not really big for a white shark. 415 00:21:58,760 --> 00:21:59,800 GREG: You think this is typical size 416 00:21:59,880 --> 00:22:01,680 you guys are seeing up here? 417 00:22:01,760 --> 00:22:03,960 HEATHER: It seems to be a lot of the juveniles, 418 00:22:04,040 --> 00:22:07,960 a lot of the acoustic detections we get, it's, it's in that, 419 00:22:08,040 --> 00:22:11,080 you know, let's say 9 to 12-foot range. 420 00:22:11,160 --> 00:22:12,800 It's, it's the smaller guys. 421 00:22:12,880 --> 00:22:14,560 GREG: Yeah. 422 00:22:14,640 --> 00:22:16,720 NARRATOR: It's an important clue 423 00:22:16,800 --> 00:22:19,160 and different to the pattern Greg and Megan see 424 00:22:19,240 --> 00:22:24,440 some 260 miles to the south around Cape Cod. 425 00:22:24,520 --> 00:22:26,120 GREG: We do see juveniles, 426 00:22:26,200 --> 00:22:30,400 but a lot of our resident sharks are big males. 427 00:22:30,480 --> 00:22:33,040 And those big males may be schoolyard bullies, you know, 428 00:22:33,120 --> 00:22:38,280 pushing these smaller animals into other parts of their range, 429 00:22:38,360 --> 00:22:42,040 which include, in the summer and the fall, Canadian waters. 430 00:22:44,560 --> 00:22:47,920 NARRATOR: In 2019, a drone operator captured sharks 431 00:22:48,000 --> 00:22:52,120 clashing off Cape Cod. 432 00:22:52,200 --> 00:22:54,520 Could territorial adult males 433 00:22:54,600 --> 00:22:57,000 be pushing smaller white sharks north? 434 00:22:57,080 --> 00:22:59,040 GREG: We also know there are social interactions 435 00:22:59,120 --> 00:23:01,680 between these sharks because we see scars. 436 00:23:01,760 --> 00:23:03,600 You know, there are bites, there are injuries 437 00:23:03,680 --> 00:23:05,920 that are clearly from other sharks. 438 00:23:06,000 --> 00:23:08,040 And is that associated with mating? 439 00:23:08,120 --> 00:23:09,320 Certainly it could be. 440 00:23:09,400 --> 00:23:12,480 But it, on juveniles, it could also be associated 441 00:23:12,560 --> 00:23:15,160 with negative interactions between sharks. 442 00:23:15,240 --> 00:23:16,840 In other words, "Get the hell out of here. 443 00:23:16,920 --> 00:23:19,280 This is my neighborhood." 444 00:23:19,360 --> 00:23:25,240 ♪ ♪ 445 00:23:25,320 --> 00:23:28,280 NARRATOR: Territory may just be part of the puzzle 446 00:23:28,360 --> 00:23:32,040 of what's drawing sharks north. 447 00:23:32,120 --> 00:23:35,200 Canada's Atlantic waters have some of the richest 448 00:23:35,280 --> 00:23:37,720 fishing grounds in the world. 449 00:23:37,800 --> 00:23:41,360 Sharks in the eight to nine-feet range are youngsters 450 00:23:41,440 --> 00:23:45,480 and, for the most part, fish-hunters. 451 00:23:45,560 --> 00:23:47,520 The shape of the seabed here, 452 00:23:47,600 --> 00:23:49,760 combined with the cold Labrador Current 453 00:23:49,840 --> 00:23:52,000 as it mixes with the Gulf Stream, 454 00:23:52,080 --> 00:23:54,440 brings nutrients up to the surface. 455 00:23:54,520 --> 00:23:57,200 (birds squawking) 456 00:23:57,280 --> 00:24:00,760 It makes for the perfect conditions for marine life 457 00:24:00,840 --> 00:24:04,600 to flourish in spectacular numbers. 458 00:24:04,680 --> 00:24:08,040 ♪ ♪ 459 00:24:08,120 --> 00:24:09,760 Canada is also experiencing 460 00:24:09,840 --> 00:24:13,240 one of its hottest Augusts on record. 461 00:24:13,320 --> 00:24:16,840 Could the mix of so much food and warming waters 462 00:24:16,920 --> 00:24:19,800 be part of what draws white sharks north? 463 00:24:29,160 --> 00:24:33,280 NARRATOR: With strong winds putting a hold on their search, 464 00:24:33,360 --> 00:24:35,400 the team decide to split up 465 00:24:35,480 --> 00:24:38,680 to check as many listening stations as possible 466 00:24:38,760 --> 00:24:43,040 to see if any of their tagged sharks have shown up. 467 00:24:43,120 --> 00:24:46,520 ♪ ♪ 468 00:24:46,600 --> 00:24:50,840 Greg heads for one of Canada's most northerly stations 469 00:24:50,920 --> 00:24:53,200 in Conception Bay, Newfoundland, 470 00:24:53,280 --> 00:24:57,320 over 700 miles to the north. 471 00:24:57,400 --> 00:25:02,360 Every spring, icebergs float past the entrance to this bay. 472 00:25:04,560 --> 00:25:07,960 Even in summer, the weather is unpredictable, 473 00:25:08,040 --> 00:25:11,520 and sea temperatures can plummet with little warning. 474 00:25:13,640 --> 00:25:15,000 It's the furthest north 475 00:25:15,080 --> 00:25:18,120 white sharks have ever been found. 476 00:25:18,200 --> 00:25:22,080 ♪ ♪ 477 00:25:22,160 --> 00:25:24,360 To check if there's been any new sightings, 478 00:25:24,440 --> 00:25:26,560 Greg joins up with Mike Piersiak 479 00:25:26,640 --> 00:25:29,640 from Fisheries and Oceans Canada. 480 00:25:31,080 --> 00:25:33,840 GREG: How deep does this, this bay get? 481 00:25:33,920 --> 00:25:36,840 MIKE PIERSIAK: This fjord gets up to well over 100 meters. 482 00:25:36,920 --> 00:25:39,000 GREG: 300, 400 feet deep? 483 00:25:39,080 --> 00:25:40,800 That's incredible. What comes in here? 484 00:25:40,880 --> 00:25:42,160 MIKE: We can get bluefin tuna in here, 485 00:25:42,240 --> 00:25:45,400 that'll follow the cod in, so, sort of a domino effect. 486 00:25:45,480 --> 00:25:47,440 Once one comes, they all come. 487 00:25:47,520 --> 00:25:48,920 GREG: And I could see why white sharks 488 00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:50,840 would want to come in here and visit occasionally. 489 00:25:50,920 --> 00:25:51,960 MIKE: Yeah, tons for them to eat. 490 00:25:52,040 --> 00:25:53,520 GREG: There's a lot to eat, yeah. 491 00:25:53,600 --> 00:26:01,320 ♪ ♪ 492 00:26:01,400 --> 00:26:03,240 NARRATOR: The crew keep a careful watch 493 00:26:03,320 --> 00:26:07,640 as the divers do a summer check of the listening stations. 494 00:26:07,720 --> 00:26:16,040 ♪ ♪ 495 00:26:16,120 --> 00:26:19,040 If a shark has passed within 1,500 feet, 496 00:26:19,120 --> 00:26:21,680 it will record the date and time. 497 00:26:24,880 --> 00:26:27,760 MIKE: Sorry, the wind's got me, Anna. 498 00:26:30,360 --> 00:26:34,040 GREG: Let's fire this baby up. 499 00:26:34,120 --> 00:26:35,360 MIKE: Let's see what we got. 500 00:26:35,440 --> 00:26:40,000 GREG: See if you recognize any of these transmitters. 501 00:26:40,080 --> 00:26:41,200 Nothing unusual to you? 502 00:26:41,280 --> 00:26:42,400 MIKE: No. 503 00:26:42,480 --> 00:26:44,120 GREG: No, I don't see any white sharks either, 504 00:26:44,200 --> 00:26:46,280 so, no detections so far this year. 505 00:26:46,360 --> 00:26:48,400 We've got some other receivers to check, 506 00:26:48,480 --> 00:26:50,360 but I, I'm not surprised at all. 507 00:26:50,440 --> 00:26:52,800 You know, we are really at the northern limit 508 00:26:52,880 --> 00:26:54,520 of this shark's range. 509 00:26:54,600 --> 00:26:57,640 And when you're at the northern limit of any species' range, 510 00:26:57,720 --> 00:27:00,320 you're in a very dangerous place for that species. 511 00:27:00,400 --> 00:27:02,720 The white shark is no exception. 512 00:27:05,640 --> 00:27:07,160 NARRATOR: White sharks spend most of their time 513 00:27:07,240 --> 00:27:10,840 in waters between 52 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. 514 00:27:10,920 --> 00:27:15,120 ♪ ♪ 515 00:27:15,200 --> 00:27:16,760 While they can survive in temperatures 516 00:27:16,840 --> 00:27:19,520 as low as 39 degrees, 517 00:27:19,600 --> 00:27:21,840 spend too long in water this cold, 518 00:27:21,920 --> 00:27:24,360 it's thought they can die. 519 00:27:24,440 --> 00:27:25,880 GREG: I have certainly seen sharks 520 00:27:25,960 --> 00:27:27,120 that have been cold shocked. 521 00:27:27,200 --> 00:27:28,440 You know, it's happened very close 522 00:27:28,520 --> 00:27:30,120 to where I live on Cape Cod. 523 00:27:30,200 --> 00:27:31,360 Bunch of thresher sharks, 524 00:27:31,440 --> 00:27:35,200 we had a really significant drop in temperature 525 00:27:35,280 --> 00:27:38,160 late in the season, and those sharks became trapped. 526 00:27:38,240 --> 00:27:41,120 They actually washed up on shore, frozen, which is amazing. 527 00:27:41,200 --> 00:27:42,600 So it killed them. 528 00:27:42,680 --> 00:27:45,520 And certainly we don't see a lot of white sharks go through that. 529 00:27:45,600 --> 00:27:48,000 And that's because they probably avoid those areas 530 00:27:48,080 --> 00:27:52,160 where those kinds of temperature extremes can happen rapidly. 531 00:27:52,240 --> 00:27:59,520 ♪ ♪ 532 00:27:59,600 --> 00:28:02,280 NARRATOR: Back in Nova Scotia, the weather has cleared enough 533 00:28:02,360 --> 00:28:05,720 for Megan and Warren to check local listening stations 534 00:28:05,800 --> 00:28:08,560 to see if any more white sharks have arrived. 535 00:28:08,640 --> 00:28:11,360 MEGAN: Alright, 9142. 536 00:28:11,440 --> 00:28:12,520 WARREN: 9142. 537 00:28:12,600 --> 00:28:13,760 MEGAN: That's one of our fish. 538 00:28:13,840 --> 00:28:14,720 WARREN: Definitely. 539 00:28:14,800 --> 00:28:16,960 MEGAN: Alright. Dropbox. 540 00:28:17,040 --> 00:28:19,560 9142, who are you? 541 00:28:22,160 --> 00:28:24,000 Ah! That's one of Chip's. 542 00:28:24,080 --> 00:28:24,960 WARREN: One of Chip's? 543 00:28:25,040 --> 00:28:26,080 MEGAN: That's awesome! 544 00:28:26,160 --> 00:28:28,520 He's gonna be so excited. 545 00:28:30,960 --> 00:28:34,760 NARRATOR: Shark 9142 is a South Carolina shark 546 00:28:34,840 --> 00:28:37,720 known as Asheville. 547 00:28:37,800 --> 00:28:44,080 She was tagged by Chip on March 8, 2019. 548 00:28:44,160 --> 00:28:50,080 At nine-foot, she's another juvenile, around 16 years old. 549 00:28:50,160 --> 00:28:54,440 Females reach adulthood when they get to around 15 feet. 550 00:28:59,560 --> 00:29:02,160 And just like the other sharks tagged in Carolina, 551 00:29:02,240 --> 00:29:04,240 shark Asheville spent the spring 552 00:29:04,320 --> 00:29:07,920 moving up the Eastern Seaboard. 553 00:29:08,000 --> 00:29:11,200 She arrived in Cape Cod on June 23rd, 554 00:29:11,280 --> 00:29:15,040 and stayed for seven days. 555 00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:19,800 She first pinged in Nova Scotia on July 18th. 556 00:29:19,880 --> 00:29:22,560 It's the third time Asheville has been detected 557 00:29:22,640 --> 00:29:24,800 in Canadian waters. 558 00:29:27,560 --> 00:29:29,280 And she's not alone. 559 00:29:29,360 --> 00:29:30,600 MEGAN: No! 560 00:29:30,680 --> 00:29:31,840 WARREN: Who's that? 561 00:29:31,920 --> 00:29:33,960 NARRATOR: Three more sharks are detected 562 00:29:34,040 --> 00:29:35,120 on the listening station. 563 00:29:35,200 --> 00:29:37,080 MEGAN: Hold on, I've got to double check. 564 00:29:37,160 --> 00:29:40,680 NARRATOR: One is a big male called Mr. Frisky. 565 00:29:40,760 --> 00:29:42,840 MEGAN: So exciting! WARREN: On the 23rd, yeah. 566 00:29:42,920 --> 00:29:46,240 NARRATOR: But the rest are all juveniles. 567 00:29:46,320 --> 00:29:48,680 A pattern is emerging. 568 00:29:48,760 --> 00:29:52,080 ♪ ♪ 569 00:29:52,160 --> 00:29:53,400 Three days later, 570 00:29:53,480 --> 00:29:56,240 and with evidence of white sharks in the area, 571 00:29:56,320 --> 00:29:59,840 the team are back together in Wedgeport, Nova Scotia, 572 00:29:59,920 --> 00:30:04,840 trying once again to get a camera on the back of a shark. 573 00:30:04,920 --> 00:30:08,040 Within minutes, one checks out the baited lines. 574 00:30:08,120 --> 00:30:10,000 HEATHER: Oh, here it is. GREG: He's on yours. 575 00:30:10,080 --> 00:30:12,240 NARRATOR: If they can get the camera tag on, 576 00:30:12,320 --> 00:30:15,640 it will be a first in Canadian waters 577 00:30:15,720 --> 00:30:20,360 and could reveal what they hunt here. 578 00:30:20,440 --> 00:30:22,760 HEATHER: Alright, tag's ready. 579 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:26,520 GREG: It's a good size fish. 580 00:30:26,600 --> 00:30:27,600 MEGAN: Here. 581 00:30:27,680 --> 00:30:28,680 HEATHER: Right here, right here, right here. 582 00:30:28,760 --> 00:30:30,360 GREG: Get back. Get back. Back. 583 00:30:30,440 --> 00:30:33,440 MEGAN: Yeah, look right there. Oh, Greg, you got it! 584 00:30:33,520 --> 00:30:34,760 Oh, it's still too deep. 585 00:30:34,840 --> 00:30:36,120 GREG: Little too deep. MEGAN: Oh! 586 00:30:36,200 --> 00:30:38,320 GREG: Sliding past you. MEGAN: Oh! 587 00:30:38,400 --> 00:30:39,960 GREG: Oh, (bleep). 588 00:30:42,040 --> 00:30:44,200 GREG: He just grabbed the ball. MEGAN: Ohhh. 589 00:30:44,280 --> 00:30:45,880 GREG: Damn it. HEATHER: A tuna. 590 00:30:45,960 --> 00:30:49,960 NARRATOR: It's the second close miss for Greg and Megan. 591 00:30:50,040 --> 00:30:54,120 ♪ ♪ 592 00:30:54,200 --> 00:30:55,880 GREG: I think if I haven't been doing this for decades, 593 00:30:55,960 --> 00:30:57,760 I'd probably throw myself overboard, 594 00:30:57,840 --> 00:31:00,680 because it's, it's very disappointing. 595 00:31:00,760 --> 00:31:05,640 You think you have that shot, but when in doubt, don't, right? 596 00:31:05,720 --> 00:31:08,000 And that's what I did. I, I held back. 597 00:31:08,080 --> 00:31:10,800 Shark passed, I think a little too deep. 598 00:31:10,880 --> 00:31:12,720 Snagged another bait and took off. 599 00:31:12,800 --> 00:31:14,560 And then you, you know, all you do is hope 600 00:31:14,640 --> 00:31:17,000 you get one more shot. 601 00:31:17,080 --> 00:31:23,160 ♪ ♪ 602 00:31:23,240 --> 00:31:26,520 NARRATOR: With just four days left of the expedition 603 00:31:26,600 --> 00:31:29,960 and time running out to get a camera tag on a shark, 604 00:31:30,040 --> 00:31:33,200 the team decide to try a new location. 605 00:31:33,280 --> 00:31:34,480 MEGAN: What we're seeing with the receivers 606 00:31:34,560 --> 00:31:35,960 that we've checked so far 607 00:31:36,040 --> 00:31:38,000 is there's little pockets of activity, 608 00:31:38,080 --> 00:31:39,560 different places along the coast, 609 00:31:39,640 --> 00:31:43,160 and one of the most active spots seems to be the Bay of Fundy. 610 00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:45,640 So it might be a great idea to head there 611 00:31:45,720 --> 00:31:48,000 and maybe we'll get a camera tag out down there. 612 00:31:48,080 --> 00:31:49,560 It's probably our best bet. 613 00:31:49,640 --> 00:31:51,320 Fingers crossed. 614 00:31:51,400 --> 00:31:56,880 ♪ ♪ 615 00:31:56,960 --> 00:32:03,360 NARRATOR: The Bay of Fundy lies just north of the US border. 616 00:32:03,440 --> 00:32:06,640 It's home to the highest tidal surges on Earth. 617 00:32:06,720 --> 00:32:09,520 (horn blows) 618 00:32:09,600 --> 00:32:13,120 At this time of year, warm, humid air from the land 619 00:32:13,200 --> 00:32:18,320 mixes with cool sea air, creating thick patches of fog. 620 00:32:20,160 --> 00:32:23,360 This will be their last chance to get the camera tag 621 00:32:23,440 --> 00:32:28,560 on a shark, and conditions could not be tougher. 622 00:32:28,640 --> 00:32:34,120 ♪ ♪ 623 00:32:34,200 --> 00:32:37,160 They begin to bait the water once again. 624 00:32:37,240 --> 00:32:42,240 ♪ ♪ 625 00:32:42,320 --> 00:32:44,680 GREG: Currents here are absolutely amazing, you know? 626 00:32:44,760 --> 00:32:47,960 We got a 20, 30-foot tidal difference, 627 00:32:48,040 --> 00:32:51,360 and that water comes in and out pretty quickly, 628 00:32:51,440 --> 00:32:54,800 so I think that's gonna spread the, the scent trail around. 629 00:32:54,880 --> 00:32:59,160 And these sharks are so well tuned to finding scent 630 00:32:59,240 --> 00:33:02,040 that it works in our favor. 631 00:33:02,120 --> 00:33:03,440 We'll see. 632 00:33:03,520 --> 00:33:08,800 ♪ ♪ 633 00:33:08,880 --> 00:33:09,760 MEGAN: Shark! 634 00:33:09,840 --> 00:33:10,720 GREG: Whoa! WARREN: Oh! 635 00:33:10,800 --> 00:33:11,880 MEGAN: Shark! 636 00:33:11,960 --> 00:33:13,560 HEATHER: There we go. GREG: Game on. Game on. 637 00:33:13,640 --> 00:33:15,520 MEGAN: Okay. Bring, bring all the floats in. 638 00:33:15,600 --> 00:33:17,960 Warren, if it's pulling you, let the rope go. 639 00:33:18,040 --> 00:33:20,640 GREG: Let it go. MEGAN: Let it go. 640 00:33:20,720 --> 00:33:26,240 ♪ ♪ 641 00:33:26,320 --> 00:33:28,080 MEGAN: No, no. GREG: Oh! Oh! 642 00:33:28,160 --> 00:33:29,320 MEGAN: There it is. GREG: That's a white shark! 643 00:33:29,400 --> 00:33:31,280 HEATHER: Oh, oh, my god. GREG: Look at that! 644 00:33:31,360 --> 00:33:34,120 You gotta see this! 645 00:33:34,200 --> 00:33:36,760 That was incredible! 646 00:33:36,840 --> 00:33:37,720 HEATHER: Ah! 647 00:33:37,800 --> 00:33:39,280 GREG: Geez! 648 00:33:42,840 --> 00:33:44,320 HEATHER: Oh, there she is! Right here! 649 00:33:44,400 --> 00:33:48,200 Yup. Greg, this side. 650 00:33:48,280 --> 00:33:49,640 She's going under the boat. 651 00:33:49,720 --> 00:33:51,040 GREG: Boy, she's fast. 652 00:33:51,120 --> 00:33:53,280 HEATHER: She is fast. 653 00:33:55,160 --> 00:33:57,000 There he is. 654 00:33:57,080 --> 00:33:58,880 GREG: Awesome. 655 00:33:58,960 --> 00:34:00,360 Look at this. Look at this. 656 00:34:00,440 --> 00:34:01,320 HEATHER: There she is. 657 00:34:01,400 --> 00:34:03,320 GREG: Oh, she's gotcha. 658 00:34:06,880 --> 00:34:08,200 Yeah! 659 00:34:08,280 --> 00:34:10,200 (cheering) Who did I hit? Who did I hit? 660 00:34:10,280 --> 00:34:11,160 Ha ha ha! 661 00:34:15,240 --> 00:34:17,280 NARRATOR: It's the first time a camera tag 662 00:34:17,360 --> 00:34:21,840 has ever been deployed on a white shark in Canada. 663 00:34:21,920 --> 00:34:23,360 It will record every move 664 00:34:23,440 --> 00:34:25,800 the shark they've nicknamed Quady makes 665 00:34:25,880 --> 00:34:29,280 for the next 24 hours, then release. 666 00:34:31,200 --> 00:34:33,120 GREG: Ah, that was fantastic. 667 00:34:33,200 --> 00:34:34,160 Did you see that? 668 00:34:34,240 --> 00:34:35,120 WARREN: Yeah, I saw it. 669 00:34:35,200 --> 00:34:37,560 (laughter) 670 00:34:37,640 --> 00:34:39,000 Yeah! 671 00:34:39,080 --> 00:34:41,760 MEGAN: I'm still shaking like probably half an hour later, 672 00:34:41,840 --> 00:34:44,520 'cause I'm still so excited. 673 00:34:44,600 --> 00:34:49,560 ♪ ♪ 674 00:34:49,640 --> 00:34:52,200 NARRATOR: The team track Quady using a hydrophone 675 00:34:52,280 --> 00:34:55,720 to pick up the signal coming from his tag. 676 00:34:55,800 --> 00:34:56,680 (chirping) 677 00:34:56,760 --> 00:34:58,920 MEGAN: Oh, yay! 678 00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:01,000 WARREN: It's scanning and it'll send out the signal 679 00:35:01,080 --> 00:35:02,320 and it'll bounce back. 680 00:35:02,400 --> 00:35:04,440 55001, so it's found it. 681 00:35:04,520 --> 00:35:06,360 MEGAN: Woo. Oh, okay. Cool. 682 00:35:08,280 --> 00:35:10,440 NARRATOR: Staying close to the shoreline, 683 00:35:10,520 --> 00:35:14,880 Quady hugs the seabed at 75 feet. 684 00:35:14,960 --> 00:35:17,280 There's so much plankton in the water, 685 00:35:17,360 --> 00:35:21,240 visibility is less than three feet. 686 00:35:21,320 --> 00:35:25,080 Sensors log his depth, speed acceleration, 687 00:35:25,160 --> 00:35:27,320 and even direction. 688 00:35:27,400 --> 00:35:30,160 WARREN: Oh, this might be it coming back now. Yup. 689 00:35:32,760 --> 00:35:34,400 NARRATOR: Out in deeper water, 690 00:35:34,480 --> 00:35:38,440 Quady stays in the top 200 feet of the water column. 691 00:35:40,320 --> 00:35:45,320 Unusually for a white shark, never diving any deeper. 692 00:35:45,400 --> 00:35:50,840 Then 30 minutes in, he suddenly speeds up and heads south. 693 00:35:52,600 --> 00:35:55,160 And they lose Quady's signal. 694 00:36:00,440 --> 00:36:01,520 WARREN: Found zero. 695 00:36:01,600 --> 00:36:04,240 (chirping) 696 00:36:06,600 --> 00:36:11,440 ♪ ♪ 697 00:36:11,520 --> 00:36:16,120 NARRATOR: 24 hours later, the tag releases. 698 00:36:16,200 --> 00:36:19,160 Megan uses a radio signal to locate it. 699 00:36:19,240 --> 00:36:24,640 ♪ ♪ 700 00:36:24,720 --> 00:36:27,360 MEGAN: Whoa! Oh, basker! 701 00:36:27,440 --> 00:36:29,480 A big basker! 702 00:36:29,560 --> 00:36:31,160 That's amazing! 703 00:36:31,240 --> 00:36:32,360 GREG: Big basking shark? 704 00:36:32,440 --> 00:36:33,640 MEGAN: A basker! 705 00:36:33,720 --> 00:36:35,320 It's beautiful! It's huge! 706 00:36:35,400 --> 00:36:37,840 (laughs) 707 00:36:37,920 --> 00:36:40,120 GREG: This place is an aquarium. 708 00:36:40,200 --> 00:36:42,000 MEGAN: That was a big fish. 709 00:36:42,080 --> 00:36:43,640 So cool. 710 00:36:46,440 --> 00:36:47,800 It should be dead ahead. 711 00:36:47,880 --> 00:36:51,600 ♪ ♪ 712 00:36:51,680 --> 00:36:54,360 I think I see it right in the middle of the weed mat. 713 00:36:54,440 --> 00:36:55,560 GREG: Oh, yeah, there it is. 714 00:36:55,640 --> 00:36:56,600 MEGAN: Ah! 715 00:36:56,680 --> 00:36:58,320 GREG: Alright! 716 00:36:58,400 --> 00:37:02,400 ♪ ♪ 717 00:37:02,480 --> 00:37:04,640 There it is. Beautiful. 718 00:37:04,720 --> 00:37:06,480 MEGAN: Thank god! 719 00:37:06,560 --> 00:37:08,680 GREG: Nice. Look at that. 720 00:37:08,760 --> 00:37:09,800 What this is right now 721 00:37:09,880 --> 00:37:13,080 is just a treasure trove of, of information. 722 00:37:20,120 --> 00:37:22,440 MEGAN: Alright, so here we go. HEATHER: Okay. 723 00:37:22,520 --> 00:37:25,600 NARRATOR: Back at base, the team pore over the footage. 724 00:37:25,680 --> 00:37:26,840 HEATHER: Oh, neat. 725 00:37:26,920 --> 00:37:28,240 GREG: Wow. 726 00:37:28,320 --> 00:37:31,000 MEGAN: It just went straight to the bottom, 727 00:37:31,080 --> 00:37:33,200 and there's not a lot of light. 728 00:37:33,280 --> 00:37:34,760 GREG: Yeah, you put yourself down on the bottom there, 729 00:37:34,840 --> 00:37:37,040 first of all, it's hard for anything else to see you. 730 00:37:37,120 --> 00:37:38,160 WARREN: Certainly. 731 00:37:38,240 --> 00:37:39,880 GREG: Because you have a really dark back, 732 00:37:39,960 --> 00:37:41,560 and you're probably blending in really well 733 00:37:41,640 --> 00:37:44,240 with that rocky, dark bottom. 734 00:37:44,320 --> 00:37:47,520 MEGAN: But then it definitely goes out into deeper water. 735 00:37:47,600 --> 00:37:50,040 Not for very long, though, like, it makes a couple 736 00:37:50,120 --> 00:37:53,160 quick zigzag dives, and then the rest of the track 737 00:37:53,240 --> 00:37:56,480 it stays pretty shallow in warmer kind of surface waters. 738 00:37:58,880 --> 00:38:00,640 GREG: What's--look at that. That, that... 739 00:38:00,720 --> 00:38:02,200 HEATHER: He must have turned around. 740 00:38:02,280 --> 00:38:03,920 MEGAN: It's, oh, you can just see the side of it, 741 00:38:04,000 --> 00:38:05,360 it's going after something. 742 00:38:05,440 --> 00:38:07,080 Wait, whoa, whoa. Whoa! 743 00:38:07,160 --> 00:38:08,560 HEATHER: Wait, wait. WARREN: Did it get something? 744 00:38:08,640 --> 00:38:10,160 GREG: What was that? MEGAN: Okay, we gotta go back. 745 00:38:10,240 --> 00:38:12,200 We gotta slo-mo it, because like a lot of times 746 00:38:12,280 --> 00:38:14,560 with these things, it just happens so fast. 747 00:38:14,640 --> 00:38:15,560 You can't even... 748 00:38:15,640 --> 00:38:16,600 GREG: Because it definitely turned. 749 00:38:16,680 --> 00:38:17,680 MEGAN: Oh, yeah. 750 00:38:17,760 --> 00:38:20,320 GREG: Looked like it grabbed something. 751 00:38:20,400 --> 00:38:22,760 MEGAN: Okay, so it's got its head pointed up now, 752 00:38:22,840 --> 00:38:24,600 and then the next shake. 753 00:38:24,680 --> 00:38:26,040 GREG: Right there. MEGAN: Yeah. 754 00:38:26,120 --> 00:38:27,120 It's got something in its mouth. 755 00:38:27,200 --> 00:38:28,480 HEATHER: What is that? MEGAN: I mean... 756 00:38:28,560 --> 00:38:30,840 GREG: That's definitely something in its mouth. 757 00:38:30,920 --> 00:38:32,240 The shark just fed. 758 00:38:32,320 --> 00:38:35,960 WARREN: I guess it could be dogfish, it could be skates, 759 00:38:36,040 --> 00:38:37,760 could be halibut, flatfish on there. 760 00:38:37,840 --> 00:38:39,080 GREG: I don't know. 761 00:38:39,160 --> 00:38:40,960 HEATHER: It's big enough it had to bite it. 762 00:38:41,040 --> 00:38:44,200 WARREN: Yeah. GREG: Yeah. Yup, it did. 763 00:38:44,280 --> 00:38:46,360 NARRATOR: It's the first glimpse 764 00:38:46,440 --> 00:38:51,080 at what white sharks are up to in Canadian waters. 765 00:38:51,160 --> 00:38:53,720 MEGAN: So this is really incredible for us to see. 766 00:38:53,800 --> 00:38:55,320 I mean, this is one shark, right, 767 00:38:55,400 --> 00:38:58,160 that's gotten a camera tag off of Canada so far. 768 00:38:58,240 --> 00:39:01,360 But I can already tell you that they operate so differently 769 00:39:01,440 --> 00:39:04,880 in this environment than they do off of Cape Cod. 770 00:39:06,480 --> 00:39:08,760 A lot of people think of them as only seal-eaters 771 00:39:08,840 --> 00:39:11,840 or mammal-eaters, but they have a very diverse diet, 772 00:39:11,920 --> 00:39:13,720 and they're very opportunistic predators, 773 00:39:13,800 --> 00:39:15,480 which allows them to take advantage 774 00:39:15,560 --> 00:39:19,440 of all these wonderful, productive, unique habitats 775 00:39:19,520 --> 00:39:22,160 throughout the course of their migration. 776 00:39:22,240 --> 00:39:27,920 ♪ ♪ 777 00:39:28,000 --> 00:39:29,200 NARRATOR: September 3rd, 778 00:39:29,280 --> 00:39:32,440 and much of Canada breaks its heat records. 779 00:39:33,880 --> 00:39:37,480 It's the last day of Greg's trip. 780 00:39:37,560 --> 00:39:39,880 To find out if sea temperatures could be influencing 781 00:39:39,960 --> 00:39:42,600 shark numbers in the Canadian Atlantic, 782 00:39:42,680 --> 00:39:46,120 he heads up to Newfoundland to meet Frederic Cyr 783 00:39:46,200 --> 00:39:50,000 at the Memorial University. 784 00:39:50,080 --> 00:39:52,320 FREDERIC CYR: We have this monitoring program going on for, 785 00:39:52,400 --> 00:39:54,200 for about, uh, 30 years right now. 786 00:39:54,280 --> 00:39:55,360 GREG: Yup. 787 00:39:55,440 --> 00:39:58,440 FREDERIC: And yeah, we, we monitor how the ocean 788 00:39:58,520 --> 00:40:01,920 is behaving, and, and we seem to see a warming up 789 00:40:02,000 --> 00:40:04,120 over the recent years, especially at the surface. 790 00:40:04,200 --> 00:40:06,560 GREG: Really? FREDERIC: Yeah. 791 00:40:06,640 --> 00:40:09,560 NARRATOR: Could warming surface waters be allowing white sharks 792 00:40:09,640 --> 00:40:14,160 to penetrate further into Canadian territory? 793 00:40:14,240 --> 00:40:16,840 FREDERIC: This is sea surface temperature average 794 00:40:16,920 --> 00:40:21,440 over decades, so you have the '80s, the '90s, 2000, 2010s. 795 00:40:21,520 --> 00:40:23,400 And what you see is basically, if you look at that, 796 00:40:23,480 --> 00:40:28,080 you see the, the iso, isotherms moving up. 797 00:40:28,160 --> 00:40:30,760 GREG: That is absolutely amazing. 798 00:40:30,840 --> 00:40:33,200 Look at that shift in the black line. 799 00:40:33,280 --> 00:40:36,040 And that indicates that white sharks are likely 800 00:40:36,120 --> 00:40:39,200 to arrive earlier, spend more time here, 801 00:40:39,280 --> 00:40:40,560 leave a little bit later. 802 00:40:40,640 --> 00:40:42,680 I mean, I think this is really cool. 803 00:40:42,760 --> 00:40:44,080 FREDERIC: You see here. 804 00:40:44,160 --> 00:40:46,520 GREG: And it would explain why, you know, more white sharks 805 00:40:46,600 --> 00:40:47,840 would come to these areas. 806 00:40:47,920 --> 00:40:49,520 FREDERIC: One thing is that underneath the surface, 807 00:40:49,600 --> 00:40:51,280 as soon as you hit about 50 meters, 808 00:40:51,360 --> 00:40:53,800 it will still remain pretty cold. 809 00:40:53,880 --> 00:40:56,640 So we will find here in the middle of the summer, 810 00:40:56,720 --> 00:40:58,880 waters below zero degrees Celsius. 811 00:40:58,960 --> 00:41:01,200 GREG: Really? Now, that's really cool, and I'll tell you why. 812 00:41:01,280 --> 00:41:04,040 We've tracked a bunch of our white sharks from Cape Cod, 813 00:41:04,120 --> 00:41:07,440 from parts south, as far south as South Carolina. 814 00:41:07,520 --> 00:41:09,840 They move up here in the summertime. 815 00:41:09,920 --> 00:41:12,520 They love these warm surface waters, you know? 816 00:41:12,600 --> 00:41:17,880 But once they get down to about 150, 160 feet, 817 00:41:17,960 --> 00:41:19,600 the 50 meters you're talking about, 818 00:41:19,680 --> 00:41:22,960 they only go down for a short period of time. 819 00:41:23,040 --> 00:41:25,000 NARRATOR: It's exactly the dive pattern 820 00:41:25,080 --> 00:41:28,200 white shark Quady showed on the camera tag. 821 00:41:28,280 --> 00:41:29,680 GREG: Well, it makes perfect sense to me, 822 00:41:29,760 --> 00:41:31,520 'cause you're telling me if they go any deeper, 823 00:41:31,600 --> 00:41:32,840 it's too cold for 'em. 824 00:41:32,920 --> 00:41:34,320 FREDERIC: Well, I wouldn't like to be there. 825 00:41:34,400 --> 00:41:35,640 GREG: No. No. 826 00:41:35,720 --> 00:41:37,040 FREDERIC: Zero degrees Celsius. I don't know how they... 827 00:41:37,120 --> 00:41:38,640 GREG: They can't do it. They just absolutely can't do it. 828 00:41:38,720 --> 00:41:40,120 So it's really cool, because we're seeing 829 00:41:40,200 --> 00:41:43,360 that the bulk of our fish spend almost all their time 830 00:41:43,440 --> 00:41:45,160 in that warm surface layer. 831 00:41:45,240 --> 00:41:47,680 FREDERIC: It's different. 832 00:41:47,760 --> 00:41:49,400 NARRATOR: With white sharks in Canada 833 00:41:49,480 --> 00:41:53,760 trapped in the surface layers of the ocean 834 00:41:53,840 --> 00:41:56,000 and the evidence from the camera tag 835 00:41:56,080 --> 00:41:59,480 confirming they're opportunistic hunters, 836 00:41:59,560 --> 00:42:02,720 the team's review of the year's listening station data 837 00:42:02,800 --> 00:42:06,120 brings further revelation. 838 00:42:06,200 --> 00:42:11,640 A lot of sharks normally seen off Cape Cod are here. 839 00:42:11,720 --> 00:42:12,640 MEGAN: This is really interesting 840 00:42:12,720 --> 00:42:14,560 because a lot of these-- so, Broken Tail, 841 00:42:14,640 --> 00:42:19,080 Scary Shark, Mr. Frisky, a lot of them were like 842 00:42:19,160 --> 00:42:21,600 kind of our resident sharks for years. 843 00:42:21,680 --> 00:42:22,800 They didn't even, we didn't, 844 00:42:22,880 --> 00:42:24,200 don't have any detections of them this year. 845 00:42:24,280 --> 00:42:25,360 HEATHER: Didn't even see them. MEGAN: Mm-mm. 846 00:42:25,440 --> 00:42:26,720 HEATHER: Yeah. 847 00:42:26,800 --> 00:42:27,800 MEGAN: It's really interesting that some of these guys 848 00:42:27,880 --> 00:42:29,320 seem to have kind of shifted. 849 00:42:29,400 --> 00:42:32,760 GREG: I'm also seeing a lot of South Carolina fish... 850 00:42:32,840 --> 00:42:35,000 MEGAN: Lot of shifts. GREG: ...as well, you know? 851 00:42:35,080 --> 00:42:37,760 But not a lot of big adults. 852 00:42:37,840 --> 00:42:39,840 NARRATOR: Plotting the detections on a map, 853 00:42:39,920 --> 00:42:43,440 the scale of the white shark presence becomes clear. 854 00:42:43,520 --> 00:42:46,400 GREG: They're kind of just blowing up everywhere 855 00:42:46,480 --> 00:42:47,920 at the same time. 856 00:42:48,000 --> 00:42:49,520 HEATHER: We thought it was quite amazing 857 00:42:49,600 --> 00:42:51,400 how many sharks we saw up here. 858 00:42:51,480 --> 00:42:56,080 Um, this year there were 78 of them, 78 individuals, 859 00:42:56,160 --> 00:42:58,160 which is the most we have seen in Canada 860 00:42:58,240 --> 00:42:59,840 since we started monitoring. 861 00:42:59,920 --> 00:43:01,200 MEGAN: That's crazy. 862 00:43:01,280 --> 00:43:04,120 Off of Cape Cod we detected 120, 863 00:43:04,200 --> 00:43:06,320 if that puts this in perspective at all. 864 00:43:06,400 --> 00:43:08,960 That's a lot of activity up here. 865 00:43:09,040 --> 00:43:12,680 NARRATOR: It's evidence Canada is a white shark hot spot, 866 00:43:12,760 --> 00:43:16,200 particularly for inexperienced juvenile sharks. 867 00:43:16,280 --> 00:43:20,960 And may explain why Canada witnessed its first shark bite 868 00:43:21,040 --> 00:43:22,960 in 150 years. 869 00:43:23,040 --> 00:43:25,480 GREG: It's been a phenomenal year for me. 870 00:43:25,560 --> 00:43:28,080 If you asked me a few years ago, 871 00:43:28,160 --> 00:43:30,160 what do you think about white sharks in Canada? 872 00:43:30,240 --> 00:43:31,960 I'd say yes, they go there, 873 00:43:32,040 --> 00:43:37,360 but I didn't realize the, the presence of these animals. 874 00:43:37,440 --> 00:43:39,200 These sharks are spreading out 875 00:43:39,280 --> 00:43:42,360 almost throughout Canadian waters. 876 00:43:44,280 --> 00:43:45,320 This is an ancient animal. 877 00:43:45,400 --> 00:43:47,080 It's been around for millions of years. 878 00:43:47,160 --> 00:43:49,840 It's a survivor because it can adapt, 879 00:43:49,920 --> 00:43:52,480 and it will continue to adapt. 880 00:43:52,560 --> 00:43:55,440 We're going to keep seeing white sharks off Canada, 881 00:43:55,520 --> 00:43:58,200 and quite possibly we'll see more. 882 00:43:58,280 --> 00:44:00,800 ♪ ♪ 883 00:44:00,880 --> 00:44:02,760 Captioned by Side Door Media Services 63585

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