Slow-moving nurse sharks have a metabolism to match

nurse shark

A nurse shark spends much of its day hiding out in the dark. The shark has a much slower metabolism than faster-moving sharks, a new study shows.

Peppe Cirotti/Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY-SA 3.0)

For some animals — and people, too — lazy is the perfect lifestyle. Nurse sharks are a great example. These aren’t the type of sharks that chase down prey at high speed. Whereas some species of sharks have to keep moving to keep water flowing over their gills, nurse sharks can wait in one spot on the ocean bottom and still breathe. And that’s what they do most of the time, coming out of their caves and crevices at night to hunt stingrays, mollusks and crustaceans among the coral. (They’re generally not a danger to humans, attacking only those who have been “acting incautiously when sharing the water with the sharks,” notes the Florida Museum of Natural History.)

But lazy living requires special adaptations. If you wanted to do nothing but lie on the sofa all day, you’d have to seriously restrict your diet to avoid gaining 300 pounds. A wild animal, in contrast, might grow more slowly or reproduce less. Nurse sharks, a species that lives in tropical and subtropical waters of the Americas and west Africa, take a different route — they have a super-slow metabolism. The nurse shark’s metabolism is the slowest ever recorded for a shark, researchers report in the April Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology.

Nicholas Whitney of Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Fla., and colleagues collected eight young nurse sharks from the Florida Keys and brought them back to the lab. One at a time, the sharks were placed in a special tank in which they could swim and the researchers could measure their respiration. The team took measurements during the day and at night, and at different water temperatures — all factors that could affect respiration — and from that determined how quickly the sharks’ metabolism ran.

Nurse sharks, they found, had a slower metabolism than any of the shark species that breathe through ram ventilation. Those are sharks that have to swim with their mouths open to keep water flowing across their gills. Since nurse sharks can breathe just fine sitting still — they pump water through their mouths and across their gills — it’s not all that surprising that their metabolism was slower. But the nurse sharks also had a slower metabolism than inactive species that live in cooler waters, such as the spiny dogfish and leopard shark. The nurse shark had the laziest metabolism of any shark so far to be studied in this way.

For the nurse shark, having a slow metabolism means that taking action, such as lunging at prey, come at a high energetic price. But instead of that being a detriment, the nurse shark has turned it into an advantage, the researchers say, one that lets them just hang out most of the time instead of forever chasing after a meal. 

Sarah Zielinski is the Editor, Print at Science News Explores. She has a B.A. in biology from Cornell University and an M.A. in journalism from New York University. She writes about ecology, plants and animals.

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