Spectacular footage captured off the southern coast of Africa shows a huge band of seals swarming and driving off a great white shark. The scene features in the first episode of the new documentary series "Planet Earth III."
South African fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus) feast on massive shoals of fish that gather in nutrient-rich coastal waters. In the three-minute-long clip narrated by naturalist and presenter David Attenborough, a herd of seals clambers down jagged cliffs to reach the water and dives below the waves in search of food.
But in recent years, waters off the southern coast of Africa have also attracted unprecedented numbers of seal-hunting great white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) — up to a dozen at a time on this particular stretch of coastline. The clip shows the great white sharks prowling clear waters of the Robberg Peninsula. The footage highlights just how fast these predators can accelerate to ambush their prey, reaching top speed with just five swipes of their tails. But it also shows how the seals are fighting back.
"Over the past two decades there has been an increased frequency of sightings of great white sharks in the area, likely as a result of the growing seal colony, but also possibly other factors that we're still trying to understand," Georgina Ward, the associate producer on the "Coasts" episode who directed the seals versus great white sharks sequence, told Live Science via email.
Aerial footage in the clip shows the sharks skirting the rugged cliff edge and driving the seals closer to the rocks, cornering them to make for an easier catch.
As one great white moves in for the kill, however, dozens of seals gather behind the shark and chase it back out to sea. More and more seals approach the shark from all sides and join the mob, eventually driving the huge predator away.
"To see such a large and competent predator completely overwhelmed by its prey and swimming off into deeper waters [is] both incredible and surprising," Ward said. "It's not how you'd expect a shark-seal encounter to go. Very occasionally you'd get one shark that just wouldn’t give up and we'd watch and film it for 10 to 15 minutes just going up and down the cliff with a swarm of seals in tow. But most of the time once mobbing started, they didn't hang around."
Fur seal mobbing has been seen and studied in other parts of the world — but not with the intensity and consistency seen at Robberg Peninsula, Ward said.
"Until recently nobody had studied the mobbing behavior here, so it's hard to know exactly how long this population of seals has been doing it," Ward said, adding an adult male was first seen mobbing a great white shark in the area in 2000.
The mobbing behavior is an aggressive form of defense utilized throughout the animal world. "Sharks are ambush hunters, preferring to sneak up on their prey, usually from below. Most of the time the seals start mobbing the shark before it's even tried to predate them, meaning the sharks lose the element of surprise," Ward said.
Researchers still aren't sure exactly why this technique is effective. "Do the sharks give up because they know the seals can now all see them? Are the seals doing more to annoy them when they are in a mob," such as biting or making sounds? "There's still so much we don’t know about these interactions," Ward said.
"Planet Earth III" will be available to watch from Nov. 4 at 8pm ET/PT on BBC America and AMC+.