Whale Sharks World’s Biggest Omnivores: Australian Study

Whale Sharks World’s Biggest Omnivores: Australian Study

CANBERRA, Jul 26 (NNN-AAP) – Australian researchers have discovered that, whale sharks eat plants, making the iconic species the world’s largest omnivores.

In a study published recently, a team from the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), and University of Auckland, discovered plant material makes up a portion of the whale sharks’ diet.

The team made the discovery while analysing biopsy samples from the sharks, at Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia (WA).

It makes whale sharks, which have been measured up to 18 metres long, the largest known omnivore species in the world.

Scientists analysed samples of possible food sources at the reef, from tiny plankton to large seaweed.

They then compared the amino acids and fatty acids in the plankton and plant material to those in the whale sharks.

They found the shark tissue contained traces of sargassum, a brown seaweed.

“We think that over evolutionary time, whale sharks have evolved the ability to digest some of this Sargassum that’s going into their guts,” Mark Meekan, an AIMS fish biologist, said in a media release.

“So, the vision we have of whale sharks coming to Ningaloo just to feast on these little krill, is only half the story. They’re actually out there eating a fair amount of algae too.”– NNN-AAP  

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