Simbi Laveau, on 02 April 2012 - 09:10 PM, said:
This premise was actually put forth in the book version of JAWS.
And dont many species have offspring before becoming full grown?
Full grown has nothing to do with sexually mature.
A 12 year old human can have a child,but is far from full grown.
This is mammals of course,but it's a consideration.
I recently saw a clip of a dinosaur expert,who totally blows former thought about dinosaurs out of the water.
He feels many dinosaur specimens,are not all different species.
He would cite maybe 4 dinosaurs,and show how they were all the same dinosaur,all at different stages of life development.
He did it with numerous different dinosaurs,and some have major changes structurally,as it went thru the developmental stages.
Size and bone structure both.
I forget the guys name....i will look for it.
But id say it's entirely possible,given sharks are ancient,that in todays world,maybe some do mature,but maybe the ones we see commonly,do not.
Another example of this is lobster.
The little 2 pounders we see on plates with butter sauce,are juveniles.
Full sized lobsters are super rare,because we fish them long before they get to be 40lbs.
There are records kept by the pilgrims I believe,who noted these creatures,and how huge they were,just back in the 1700s.
We fished adults into extinction for food.
I'd say this is a possibility .....no one has kept a great white in captivity (save Monterey ,for six mos)
So no one knows how big they might get,not exposed to the harshest elements they face day to day.
Sorry mate but no it isnt a possibility. I saw your comments about being quite interested in sharks, so am i. I actually am a marine biologist and work with them. I saw that talk on dinosaurs you refered to but this doesnt apply to sharks. As far as great whites growing further if undisturbed. well i wish it worked like that, but all animals display growth shaped in a very specific way. The most accurately growth model for elasmobranchs, the von Bertalanfy growth function platoes at a certain max size, which means that growth rates decrease exponentialy untill they reach a maximum theoretical lenght, so we are quite certain that great whites cannot grow to megalodon like sizes. Additionaly, new information on the taxonomy and phylogeny of the megalodon show it as being coloser to long fin mackos than great whites, so it is likely tha morphologically this was true as well. Id like to think so, since that would be by far a more formidable shark, adapted as an oceanic pelagic hunter...