Deadly seafood: fish use sharp barbs and spines to fight off hungry seals

Modern medical scanning reveals the steep price some marine mammals are willing to pay for food, after a stranded fur seal was discovered with more than a dozen facial wounds inflicted by its seafood prey.
What price are you willing to pay for food? As humans, we face this challenge each time we shop, but for some seals and dolphins this may be a life or death decision.
The extreme dangers facing hungry marine mammals are revealed in a new study published today in the journal Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, led marine biologist Dr David Hocking from the Monash University School of Biological Sciences.
“Marine mammals like whales, seals and dolphins need to eat seafood to survive”, Dr Hocking said, “but we seldom consider what the fish think of this situation. Obviously, they are less than enthusiastic about being eaten, and some of them have evolved elaborate defence systems to help them fight off would-be predators”.
The study describes a stranded seal found at Cape Conran in south-eastern Australia, which – according to Dr Hocking – “followed its stomach one fish too far”. Unusually, a fish spine was seen poking through the seal’s cheek, prompting the researchers to CT scan the seal using the cutting-edge facilities at Monash Biomedical Imaging.
“We were shocked to discover not one, but six fish spines embedded in the seal’s face,” said Associate Professor Alistair Evans, a co-author on the study, also from the Monash School of Biological Sciences. These were later identified by comparing them with specimens at Museums Victoria.
“The fish spines turned out to be tail barbs from stingarees [a small type of stingray] and serrated spines from the back fin on Australian ghostsharks ,” said Dr Evans.
While seals are known to feed on these types of prey, this is the first time that we understand how dangerous this process can be. This raises an interesting question: is the Cape Conran seal just an unusual case, or have similar injuries in other stranded individuals simply been overlooked?
“In New Zealand, fur seals target ghostsharks regularly. With that in mind, similar facial wounds may actually be rather common, even though they haven’t been recognised much.” said co-author Dr Felix Marx from Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. “That’s perhaps not surprising, as the injuries could easily have been hidden beneath the seals’ thick fur.”
Animals from future stranding events will be examined using X-ray and medical imaging to look for further evidence of facial injuries – a unique yet gruesome window into the eternal battle between predator and prey.
To download a copy of the paper, please visit:
https://doi.org/10.3354/dao03473
Further information:
Dr David Hocking
M: +61 4 3482 5013
E: david@dphocking.com
Media enquiries:
Silvia Dropulich
Marketing, Media & Communications Manager, Monash Science
T: +61 3 9902 4513 M: +61 435 138 743
Email: silvia.dropulich@monash.edu