Why do leopard sharks flash their white bellies? Point Loma researchers are on the case

Andrew Nosal, an associate professor of biology at Point Loma Nazarene University, spent the summer with students at La Jolla Shores observing the sharks both underwater and with drones.

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It’s no secret to most San Diegans that leopard sharks arrive each summer to warm their pregnant bellies at La Jolla Shores.

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But much remains unknown about the animals. Andrew Nosal, an associate professor of biology at Point Loma Nazarene University, has spent the past several years trying to unlock their secrets each season while they are here.

Among the questions: Why do so many gather in the first place? And why they flip on their backs to rub against the sand (an action first noticed last summer)?

Nosal has always mentored undergraduates who have helped with fieldwork. But this year he began teaching a summer program in which students help direct the research.

During the 10-week program, which wrapped up in August, he encouraged students to form research questions as well as collect and analyze data that will be used for a published paper, Nosal said.

Josh Gailey swims in search of leopard sharks off La Jolla.
Josh Gailey, a student at Point Loma Nazarene University, swims in search of leopard sharks off La Jolla as part of a summer research program.
(Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

His research methods have improved over the past 15 years.

Back then, it was still relatively unknown just how many leopard sharks typically gather off La Jolla.

One day Nosal saw footage from a news helicopter flying over a shiver of sharks, prompting the scientist to order a 6-foot-wide helium balloon for the same bird’s-eye view. Turns out, there were dozens of sharks.

Now, rather than attaching a first-generation GoPro to his balloon and trying to guess — often unsuccessfully — where the sharks were, he uses drones.

A few years ago he started pairing the drone footage with a computer program that tracks each shark in the group by looking at contrasts, such as a dark object swimming in a lighter area.

“We didn’t have to guess where the sharks were,” Nosal said. “We could just look on our phones or on the controller and see where the sharks were and we could search for them if we didn’t see them in the first place.”

On a weekday in mid-August, Nosal met with three of his students behind the La Jolla Shores Hotel before launching a drone to spot the sharks.

Andrew Nosal and biology students head to the water at La Jolla Shores.
Andrew Nosal, an associate professor of biology at Point Loma Nazarene University, leads biology students to the water at La Jolla Shores.
(Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Then the researchers put on their snorkel gear and swam out in search of the animals.

“Some days we like to just have a little bit of fun and just be in the water to really connect with the animals we study,” Nosal said. “But it’s not just for fun. We are making observations, and that’s what we were doing today.”

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They were looking for a few behaviors and trying to better grasp the sharks’ relationship with one another.

One behavior in particular is a rolling motion in which the animal flips on its back to rub against the sand, which has been seen many times from the air since it was first noticed last summer but has been witnessed few times in the water.

Leopard sharks swim along the sea floor off La Jolla Shores.
Leopard sharks swim along the sea floor off La Jolla Shores. Pregnant females come to the area each summer.
(Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Nosal observed the movement that day.

“When you have 200 sharks in the same field of view, it’s amazing because you start to see these white flashes all over the place,” he said.

The scientists think the flipping could be a tactic to rub off parasites. The footage has been helpful in counting how many times the behavior occurs and how many sharks participate.

The data also is used to try to answer why so many leopard sharks gather at La Jolla Shores at the same time. Are they all attracted to the same features? Or is there a social reason?

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The location is a popular site for mostly pregnant females from late June to early December. The warm water is thought to be used for incubation. The spot is at the head of La Jolla Submarine Canyon, which creates a “divergent zone,” creating smaller waves by diverting them left and right over the top of the canyon, ultimately creating a warm water patch. Each year, the sharks give birth to about 20 pups each. The bigger the female, the more offspring she has.

“We’re starting to look into how they interact with each other and how they stay together as a group,” said Josh Gailey, a senior at Point Loma Nazarene with a double major in biology and philosophy. “Or are they all independent [and] they just happen to be in the same area because they all like it?”

Professor Andrew Nosal and biology student Caroline Saple
Professor Andrew Nosal and biology student Caroline Saple take a break from studying behaviors of leopard sharks.
(Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Gailey has an interest in bioethics and has been thinking a lot about the popularity of snorkeling and swimming with leopard sharks, which are harmless to people. The sharks are known to hang out in the Matlahuayl State Marine Reserve, one of La Jolla’s four marine protected areas, where fishing isn’t allowed but recreation is.

Gailey wonders if the commotion may frighten the sharks, causing them to leave. If that happens and they spend less time in the optimal temperature area, would they incubate more slowly? “How do people affect them?” he said.

During the students’ hour-long dive, they saw more leopard sharks than normal. The group left satisfied after seeing a rare underwater flip of a white belly and capturing other behaviors that will studied in the lab.

Professor Andrew Nosal (center) and students Caroline Saple and Josh Gailey fly a drone to look at leopard sharks.
(Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

“[Students] get to learn these important field techniques,” Nosal said. “They get to learn how to safely handle sharks and how to respectfully handle sharks. And there’s nothing quite like seeing your study species in real life.”

Gailey agreed that this wasn’t the typical lab class.

Most of the time, labs are planned out, with steps to follow, he said. “But there’s very few times that you come across a thing where ... you’re the one coming up with the steps.”