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Monday, February 3, 2025

Baby shark (doo-doo-doo) caught off Charlestown

Ocean State Shark Discovery: Rare Visitor or Sign of Change?

By Staff / ecoRI News

The surprise visitor was measured and released.
(Atlantic Shark Institute)
On the first day of September last year, Captain Carl Granquist was fishing just south of Charlestown, R.I., when his catch landed on the deck of his boat, the F/V Estrella Domar. A small shark he was unfamiliar with was thrashing around.

Granquist wasn’t sure of the species. He videoed the shark and measured the 24-inch species before releasing it. When Granquist shared the video with the Rhode Island-based shark research group the Atlantic Shark Institute to see whether it could make a positive identification, his unplanned catch kick-started a dive that culminated in a research paper published recently in the Journal of Fish Biology.

“Less than an hour after Granquist released the shark, I received the video and I was really surprised at the size and potential species of the shark,” said Jon Dodd, executive director of the Atlantic Shark Institute (ASI). “I knew it was one of two species of shark and either one would be a pretty unique find here in Rhode Island waters, particularly at only 24 inches in length.”

Dodd knew he was looking at either a spinner shark or blacktip shark. Both species are well documented along the southeastern coast of the United States and can be difficult to tell apart.

To assist in the identification, Dodd turned to Joshua Moyer of Yale University and Stephen Kajiura of Florida Atlantic University, who is also a member of the ASI’s Research Advisory Board.

Kajiura agreed identification was difficult, but noted that such a young shark of either species in Rhode Island waters had rarely been documented and was worth investigating. Moyer, lead author of the paper documenting this find, reviewed the scientific literature for reliable diagnostic criteria to identify the species in Granquist’s video.

“That was quite a scavenger hunt,” Moyer said. “These are very similar species, and many historic works on sharks in New England either admit that their identification of these sharks could be mistaken, or they do not tell you how they made their identification.”

Ultimately, measurements along the snout were key for species distinction, and using frame-by-frame analysis, Moyer confirmed Dodd and Kajiura’s hunch that the shark in question was a spinner shark.

The waters of southern New England aren’t currently recognized as nursery habitat for juvenile spinner sharks. Most documented nursery habitat for spinners range from the Carolinas to Florida, according to Moyer.

Whether nursery habitat is shifting northward because of climate change or the shark in question is a rare stray, it’s too soon to tell, according to Dodd. He noted a single shark doesn’t constitute proof of a nursery.

“This discovery raises a number of really important questions and it’s the very reason we do this critical research,” Dodd said.