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These images may provide the world’s first-ever look at a live newborn great white shark

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Great white sharks are among the most notable of the ocean’s apex predators, but a crucial part of their existence has never before been recorded, or even seen – until now. For the first time ever, an infant great white shark is believed to have been caught on camera, shortly after it was born. 

For years, wildlife photographer and videographer Carlos Gauna has ventured out to spend hours filming sharks, a process that he calls seeking to uncover “the secret lives of sharks.” 

“I want to kind of tell the story of what sharks do when we aren’t watching, we aren’t interacting with them, when we’re not touching them,” he told CBS. News. “…And through that experience, I’ve seen some sharks doing some really wild things, things that have no explanation. … You never know what you’re going to see.” 

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Carlos Gauna caught images of what is believed to be a newborn great white shark swimming off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, last year, in what marks the first-ever images of a great white at that stage. 

Carlos Gauna/ @TheMalibuArtist


And when Gauna set out on July 9 last year, he had no idea what he would come across. After spending three years observing sharks in the Santa Barbara area, he said he had noticed a gathering of “really large sharks” during a particular month.

“It’s always food or reproduction or something,” he said. “They’re coming here for a reason.” 

The birthing habits of great whites are largely unknown to the scientific community. From what researchers have observed, the animals have a gestation period of more than a year, with mother sharks typically carrying between two to 10 pups at a time. The animals are ovoviviparous, meaning the eggs containing their embryos hatch within their bodies but later emerge through a live birth after fully developing.

Gauna suspected that the sharks in this area may be giving birth, but when he brought it up to scientists and conducted research, he said he was mostly told that white sharks will only give birth in deeper waters. But then, using the second-to-last battery in his drone, he and his partner, University of California, Riverside, biology doctoral student Phillip Sternes, “observed a big, big shark go down” underwater around 1,000 feet from shore.

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A longtime wildlife photographer captured a drone image of what’s believed to be the first-ever sighting of a live newborn great white shark. 

Carlos Gauna/ @TheMalibuArtist


“Just a few minutes later, this little bitty thing comes up from that spot,” he told CBS News, saying that at first they thought the roughly 5-foot-long nearly purely white animal may have been an albino shark. “…It was tiny – really, really small compared to all the other sharks.”

Then he played back the video, and he noticed a white film sloughing off the shark as it swam.

“I think Phil’s words were, ‘Oh my God, I think that might be a newborn,'” he said. In a press release, he added, “There have been dead white sharks found inside deceased pregnant mothers. But nothing like this.”

Some scientists the duo spoke to believe that what they observed was a skin condition, but Gauna – whose findings were peer-reviewed and published Monday in the journal Environmental Biology of Fishes – believes what they witnessed was the newborn shark shedding intrauterine milk. According to a separate study in 2022 by other researchers, white sharks produce a “lipid-rich secretion for embryonic nutrition” known as uterine milk within their uterine wall. 

He also said that the shark’s size and shape, as well as the fact that pregnant sharks had previously been seen in the area, indicated it was a newborn. The shark was roughly five feet long – a size known for newborn great whites – and its fin was short and rounded. 

“I just don’t see how a skin disorder explains this,” he said. “Given the size of the shark, given the unique roundness of that dorsal fin – they can’t give birth with a dorsal fin that’s straight and long, straight and pointed. They have to be rounded in order to exit.” 

Capturing a live birth across any species is rare, Gauna said, because “it’s just so unpredictable.” And while finding a newborn shark isn’t exactly the “holy grail” of shark science because it’s not the birth itself, Gauna said it’s a “key component” that can help researchers get there. It’s particularly important for great whites, as the species is considered vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species.

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Carlos Gauna/@TheMalibuArtist


“Filming in the ocean is one of the hardest things to do on this planet,” he said. “…[With great whites] we’ve always believed it’s deep, it’s offshore. So this is why I think this is very significant in that maybe we should start looking closer to shore.” 

For Gauna, the research isn’t over. He’s had a fascination for sharks since he was 5 years old, when he had a toy shark that he played with in the bath. Over the years, he says he’s witnessed the animals undergoing significant harm, including boat collisions and fishing> He said at one point, he even filmed a dead great white that had a “rope tied around its mouth and the jaws pulled out” – in the same spot where he filmed the newborn. 

The animals need more research and protection, Gauna said, and he plans on continuing to investigate the “curious, calm and calculating creatures” that remain so mysterious to the scientific community. 

“Any nursery for any species should be considered important,” he said. “…We’re gonna go back and see if we can capture it again.”



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Tropical Storm Beryl forms in Atlantic, forecast to strengthen into hurricane

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Alberto dissipates after flooding Mexico, Texas


Alberto dissipates after flooding parts of Mexico and Texas

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Beryl, the second tropical storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, took shape Friday as it barreled its way toward the Caribbean.

Beryl was expected to strengthen into a hurricane as it approached the Windward Islands in the West Indies, the National Hurricane Center reported in its latest advisory late Friday night.

Beryl was centered about 1,110 miles southeast of Barbados, the hurricane center said, with maximum sustained winds of 40 miles per hour and tropical storm-force winds extending 45 miles from its center. It was moving west at 18 mph.

The system was expected to hit the Windward Islands by late Sunday or Monday, and was forecast to bring anything from 3 to 6 inches of rain to the Windward Islands and Barbados. No watches or warnings were yet in place. 

Tropical Storm Beryl forms in Atlantic, forecast to strengthen into hurricane
The forecast path of Tropical Storm Beryl as of June 28, 2024. 

NOAA


Last week, Tropical Storm Alberto brought torrential flooding to portions of southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. It was responsible for at least four deaths in the Mexican states of Nuevo Leon and Veracruz, according to the Associated Press.

The Atlantic hurricane season began June 1 and lasts through Nov. 30. According to the hurricane center, the season’s first hurricane usually forms in early to mid-August, which would make Beryl unusual if it were to reach hurricane strength. In a report released last month, the NOAA predicted an “above average” hurricane season with 17 to 25 storms, 8 to 13 hurricanes and 4 to 7 major hurricanes of category 3 or higher.

A tropical storm is a tropical cyclone with maximum sustained winds of 39 to 73 mph, while a hurricane is defined as a tropical cyclone with maximum sustained winds greater than 74 mph. 



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Martin Mull, beloved actor known for “Fernwood 2 Night,” “Roseanne” and “Sabrina the Teenage Witch,” dies at 80

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Martin Mull, whose droll, esoteric comedy and acting made him a hip sensation in the 1970s and later a beloved guest star on sitcoms including “Roseanne” and “Arrested Development,” has died, his daughter said Friday. He was 80. 

Mull’s Daughter, TV writer and comic artist Maggie Mull, said her father died at home on Thursday after “a valiant fight against a long illness.”

Mull, who was also a guitarist and painter, came to national fame with a recurring role on the Norman Lear-created satirical soap opera “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman,” and the starring role in its spinoff, “Fernwood 2 Night,” on which he played the host of a satirical talk show.

Actor Martin Mull
Martin Mull at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival premiere of the Netflix film “A Futile And Stupid Gesture at Eccles Center Theatre” on January 24, 2018, in Park City, Utah. 

Mat Hayward/Getty Images for Netflix


“He was known for excelling at every creative discipline imaginable and also for doing Red Roof Inn commercials,” Maggie Mull said in an Instagram post. “He would find that joke funny. He was never not funny. My dad will be deeply missed by his wife and daughter, by his friends and coworkers, by fellow artists and comedians and musicians, and —the sign of a truly exceptional person— by many, many dogs.”

Melissa Joan Hart, who acted alongside Mull in the series “Sabrina the Teenage Witch,” paid tribute to him on Instagram on Friday, calling him “a wonderful man who I am better for knowing.”

“I have such fond memories of working with him and being in awe of his huge body of work,” she wrote.  

Known for his blonde hair and well-trimmed mustache, Mull was born in Chicago, raised in Ohio and Connecticut. He studied art in Rhode Island and Rome. He combined his music and comedy in hip Hollywood clubs in the 1970s.

“In 1976 I was a guitar player and sit-down comic appearing at the Roxy on the Sunset Strip when Norman Lear walked in and heard me,” Mull told The Associated Press in 1980. “He cast me as the wife beater on ‘Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.’ Four months later I was spun off on my own show.”

In the 1980s he appeared in films including “Mr. Mom” and “Clue,” and in the 1990s had a recurring role on “Roseanne.”

He would later play private eye Gene Parmesan on “Arrested Development,” and would be nominated for an Emmy in 2016 for a guest turn on “Veep.”





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