Great white sharks could soon appear in BRITAIN thanks to warming seas,
The scariest thing about swimming in British seas is the temperature – but that could all be about to change, experts have warned.
Researchers have warned that great white sharks could soon appear off Britain’s coast thanks to global warming.
There has never been any official confirmation that the 16–foot (4.9–metre) marine predators, which gained notoriety from the film Jaws, currently lurk in our seas.
However, a new study has shown that their extinct relatives once roamed these waters, feasting on large whales.
Now, warming temperatures could create the perfect environment for great whites to return and even thrive, experts said.
‘Our new study of two whale fossils, with preserved fragments of shark teeth, suggests the modern descendants of these animals could once again roam the southern region of the North Sea, between the UK, Belgium and Denmark,’ researchers wrote in a blog on The Conversation.
‘Climate change may recreate the conditions that allowed the ancestors of great white sharks to hunt in these waters.’
Despite no official record, there have been numerous unconfirmed sightings of great whites around Cornwall and northern Scotland – indicating they may actually already be here.
Warming temperatures could create the perfect environment for great whites to return and even thrive in British waters (stock image)
For their study, the researchers analysed whale fossils dating back millions of years that featured bite marks. Remarkably, some even contained fossilised shark tooth fragments
For their study, the team – consisting of Professor John Stewart from Bournemouth University and Olivier Lambert from the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences – analysed whale fossils dating back five million years that were found in the North Sea.
These whales had bite marks and, in a rare discovery, also contained fossilised tooth fragments from the predators that had eaten them.
One of the whales had likely been attacked by an extinct mako shark – a relative of today’s great white shark.
‘It appears that the shark was attempting to separate the whale’s head from the rest of the body,’ the researchers wrote.
They explained that climate change will have – and is already having – an impact on the distribution of marine mammals.
‘Warming seas could attract dolphins and seals, and in turn great white sharks or other large marine predators,’ they said.
A separate study, published in 2022, found that British waters ‘display near–perfect habitat suitability’ for great white sharks.
Author Max Kimble explained that there have been ‘over 100 reports’ of great white sharks in British waters in the last decade.
This map shows unconfirmed great white shark sightings in the UK, as well as confirmed sightings in Europe
The nearest known population resides in the Mediterranean – although numbers are thought to be rapidly declining.
‘British waters are home to the largest grey seal population in Europe and are less than 200 miles away from a known great white population,’ Mr Kimble wrote.
‘This coupled with the shark’s global distribution and preference for more temperate waters has left many wondering why there has not been a confirmed sighting of this species.
‘To examine the suitability of British waters, four white shark’s migrations were mapped spanning nine years.
‘The results of this report showed that British waters display near–perfect habitat suitability for both sexes year–round, thus indicating that there is no environmental reasoning for their apparent absence.’
He said that if a great white were to visit British waters, it would most likely be a male from the Mediterranean population swimming at depth.
This could explain why, despite ‘perfect conditions’, they have not yet been confirmed in British waters.
‘This species is currently experiencing a latitudinal shift north in habitat suitability due to climate change, indicating that if the great white is not in British waters yet it may soon be,’ he concluded.
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A promising study, published last year, revealed that the Jaws Effect is finally wearing off.
Named after the 1975 thriller, this phenomenon describes how films featuring sharks fuel a fear of the creatures in the real world.
In the study, researchers from the University of South Australia asked hundreds of people to describe sharks in three words.
While ‘teeth’, ‘jaws’ and ‘predator’ were some of the most common answers, the vast majority (66 per cent) of the descriptors were neutral.
According to the researchers, this suggests public attitudes towards sharks are softening.



