Endangered 14-foot shark pregnant with 40 pups washed up on beach


This shark’s sacrifice won’t be in vain.

Scientists were flabbergasted after a giant, dead hammerhead shark washed up on an Alabama beach with 40 pups in its stomach.

The find was described recently in a Facebook post by City of Orange Beach Coastal Resources, who recovered the fearsome flotsam.

According to the post, the incident occurred Thursday after “a deceased 14-foot Great hammerhead shark” washed ashore in Orange Beach, Alabama.

“A few individuals pulled it to shore and contacted Coastal Resources,” they wrote. “Our staff quickly arrived and were able to get it off of the beach.”

The 14-foot hammerhead shark carcass is hoisted onto a truck in Orange Beach, Alabama.

The team continued, “While it was very sad that it passed, we were excited about the rare opportunity of seeing a Great hammerhead in such good condition.”

Accompanying photos show the rescue crew using a crane to lift the shark’s carcass onto the back of a truck.


The beached hammerhead.
The beached hammerhead shark.
City of Orange Beach Coastal Resources

The 40 pups that scientists extracted from the critter's stomach.
Scientists extracted 40 pups from the animal’s stomach.
MSU Marine Fisheries Ecology

Named for its gavel-shaped noggin, the critically endangered critter is one of the largest sharks in the world, capable of weighing nearly 1,000 pounds and attaining lengths of 20 feet.

The beast preys on smaller fish, octopuses, squid and stingrays, which it locates by using its hammerhead to scan the sand like a giant fleshy treasure detector.

Determined to take advantage of the intact specimen, scientists reached out to researchers at Mississippi State University’s Marine Fisheries Ecology group, who performed a necropsy on the corpse the following day.


Beachgoers marvel over the fearsome flotsam.
Beachgoers marvel over the fearsome flotsam.
City of Orange Beach Coastal Resources

They didn’t determine the animal’s cause of death; however, the post-mortem examination did reveal a Jaws-dropping surprise: The hammerhead was reportedly pregnant with 40 pups.

While certainly crestfallen over the deaths of the mama shark and her offspring, Orange Beach Coastal Resources acknowledged that “the data collected will be tremendously helpful in learning about Great hammerhead fecundity [fertility].”

“This was definitely an experience that we won’t forget, and we are grateful to have played a small role in this unique case,” they wrote.


Officials tow the shark off the beach.
“We are very thankful that our staff was able to get the shark off of the beach, protected from the elements, and iced down within a few short hours of the initial call,” the City of Orange Beach Coastal Resources team wrote on their Facebook page.
City of Orange Beach Coastal Resources

In a similar story last year, beachgoers stumbled upon an 11-foot, 500-pound female hammerhead that had washed ashore in Southeast Florida.

Just like in the aforementioned incident, it also had a payload of pups in its stomach.



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