logo
What Did Megalodon Really Eat? Probably Everything.

What Did Megalodon Really Eat? Probably Everything.

Forbes11-06-2025
Lead study author Jeremy McCormack of Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany, holds up a fossilized ... More megalodon tooth.
For decades, the giant prehistoric shark known ominously as 'The Meg" has been portrayed as a massive apex predator that hunted the only formidable opponent in the oceans at the time: whales. But new research suggests the reality was more nuanced — and a lot more interesting.
In a study published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, scientists used advanced geochemical techniques to analyze fossilized tooth enamel and found evidence that indicate this now-extinct behemoth likely had a more varied and opportunistic diet, feeding on whatever was available in its environment to satisfy its immense appetite The key to figuring out this mystery lay in the isotopes of zinc preserved in its teeth, which serve as chemical fingerprints of what an animal ate during its life.
Researchers led by Dr. Jeremy McCormack at Goethe University in Germany analyzed 209 fossil teeth from 21 different species (both marine and terrestrial) dating back to the early Miocene period, roughly 20 to 16 million years ago. The fossils were collected from sites in what is now southern Germany, specifically a shallow seaway that once connected the ancient seas known as the Upper Marine Molasse. By focusing on a specific time and place, the team were able to compare Megalodon's diet with that of other sharks, dolphins and marine animals living at the same time.
What makes this research stand out is its use of zinc isotope ratios (specifically δ⁶⁶Zn) as a tool for estimating an animal's trophic position, or its level in the food web. While nitrogen isotopes (δ¹⁵N) have traditionally been used to track trophic levels, they can degrade over time, especially in fossils millions of years old. Zinc isotopes, on the other hand, are much more stable and are now emerging as a reliable alternative. The higher an animal is in the food chain, the lower its δ⁶⁶Zn values tend to be, because heavier zinc isotopes are preferentially retained in tissues lower down the food chain, while top predators, which eat those animals, end up with lighter zinc signatures.
In this study, Megalodon teeth consistently showed some of the lowest δ⁶⁶Zn values across the entire fossil dataset, placing them at the very top of the marine food web. The researchers also looked at the extinct Carcharodon hastalis, which is a possible ancestor of the modern great white shark, and found its δ⁶⁶Zn values were slightly higher. This suggests it fed at a slightly lower trophic level or had a different diet, supporting what many paleontologists have long suspected — that Megalodon was a top predator, likely preying on large marine mammals such as whales and dolphins. Finally, the scientists analyzed modern marine species, including sharks and dolphins, to create a baseline for comparison. They found that even today, top predators like killer whales have similarly low δ⁶⁶Zn values, further supporting the idea that zinc isotopes accurately reflect trophic level.
McCormack works at the mass spectrometer, which is used to determine the zinc isotope ratio. This ... More ratio provides information about the diet of Otodus megalodon.
Paleontologists have long suspected that Megalodon was a top predator based on its massive size, tooth morphology, and fossil evidence showing bite marks on whale bones. What this study does is go a step further by providing chemical evidence that directly links Megalodon to a high trophic level, rather than relying only on anatomical or circumstantial evidence. See, scientists face major challenges when trying to reconstruct what a creature like Megalodon actually ate. Sharks have skeletons made mostly of cartilage, which doesn't fossilize well, so researchers often rely on teeth. While bite marks on fossilized whale bones have been strong evidence of marine mammal being part of the Meg's meals, bites on other sharks leave less obvious traces, making dietary conclusions based only on physical bite evidence tricky and potentially misleading.
This new chemical analysis helps fill in those gaps.
By creating a kind of prehistoric food web, the researchers placed animals like sea bream (which eat mussels and crustaceans) at the bottom, followed by smaller sharks and extinct toothed whales the size of modern dolphins. Megalodon still sat near the top, as expected, but its zinc isotope levels weren't wildly different from those just below it in the chain, suggesting that those species may have ended up on the menu too.
While the conclusion itself (big shark ate big animals) isn't groundbreaking on its own, the method is what's novel and important. This is the first time zinc isotopes have been used in this way for extinct marine predators, and the fact that the values line up with what we see in modern apex predators opens the door to re-examining other ancient species' diets and food web roles with greater precision.
Still, it seems that ancient ecosystems are not so different from today's. Apex predators existed, food webs were complex, and adaptability was key to survival. Megalodon may have ruled the oceans, but not alone… and not without competition.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Orcas Caught 'Kissing' For Two Minutes With Tongue
Orcas Caught 'Kissing' For Two Minutes With Tongue

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Orcas Caught 'Kissing' For Two Minutes With Tongue

We've recently seen orcas foray into the world of fashion by wearing dead salmon as hats. Now a pair of orcas has been caught 'French kissing', taking their apparent mockery of human habits towards another flavor of gross. The whales' slobber sharing was incidentally captured by citizen scientists who observed and recorded the wild orcas (Orcinus orca) nibbling on each other's tongues in Norway's Kvænangen fjords. Maybe the marine mammals used some kelp grooming tools earlier to prepare for this date? "The interaction… lasted nearly two minutes and involved repeated episodes of gentle, face-to-face oral contact," describe marine scientist Javier Almunia, director of the Loro Parque Foundation, and colleagues. Such behavior in orcas had only been observed in captivity previously, as recorded in a 2019 study (video below). "We documented the pattern 'gentle tongue bite', where an animal touches the other's tongue with his teeth but does not bite it," the researchers explained at the time. Related: Beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) have also displayed mouth-to-mouth interactions in the wild. During a study on captive belugas, kissing behaviors were mostly initiated by the young animals, suggestive of play that might help refine motor and social skills. Neither species showed any signs of aggression during these interactions. So, while researchers caution it is difficult to draw conclusions from a single observation, they suspect the orcas could be using this behavior to help maintain social bonds. Alternatively, the 'kissing' could be a form of social grooming – as seen in primates – or even a type of begging behavior, Almunia and team speculate. It might also be a cultural trend, a game passing through the pod like the dead salmon hats, which only seem to occur in one cultural group of orcas. Along with kelp or pebble grooming, other signs of distinct orca cultures include regional differences in their dialects, food preferences, and hunting techniques. A group in the Mediterranean has even developed a habit of attacking sailing yachts. Whatever the purpose behind an orca's kiss, the recent spate of unexpected behaviors discovered in orcas makes one thing clear: there's still so much we don't understand about the remarkable animals we share our world with. This research was published in Oceans. Microbe 'Flavors' Tell Octopuses Which Babies Deserve Their Care A Mysterious Blob of Cold Water Defies Ocean Heat – Now We Know Why Scientists Discover 'Goblin Prince' That Roamed With Dinosaurs

Wild orcas offer humans food. Could they be trying to make friends — or manipulate us?
Wild orcas offer humans food. Could they be trying to make friends — or manipulate us?

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Wild orcas offer humans food. Could they be trying to make friends — or manipulate us?

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Wild orcas occasionally approach humans and offer us food, according to a new study — but scientists aren't sure why. Researchers have documented dozens of cases of orcas (Orcinus orca), also known as killer whales, dropping prey and other sea life in front of people. In almost all of the encounters, the orcas then waited to see what humans would do with their offering, and sometimes tried to offer food more than once. These offerings included fish, some whale, birds, stingrays, seaweed and a turtle. Researchers aren't certain what's driving this behavior, which was documented in different orca populations over a more than 20-year period. But orcas are known to share their food, according to the new study, published June 30 in the Journal of Comparative Psychology. "Orcas often share food with each other — it's a prosocial activity and a way that they build relationships with each other," study lead author Jared Towers, the executive director of Bay Cetology, a cetacean research institute in Canada, said in a statement. "That they also share with humans may show their interest in relating to us as well." The researchers offered a range of possible explanations for the behavior, suggesting that offering items to humans could provide opportunities for the orcas "to practice learned cultural behavior, explore or play," and potentially form relationships with us. However, while the behavior seems altruistic, the researchers couldn't rule out that the orcas were trying to manipulate the people they approached — though it's unclear what the orcas are trying to achieve. Erich Hoyt, a researcher at the charity Whale and Dolphin Conservation who was not involved in the study, told Live Science that the authors gave plausible reasons for the orcas sharing prey with humans. "The study was done carefully, removing borderline cases, and the method was clearly explained," Hoyt, who also wrote "Orca: The Whale Called Killer" (Firefly Books, 2019), said in an email. "The authors are suitably careful about the conclusions and suggesting various explanations." Related: Orcas filmed making out in the wild for first time The researchers reported 34 sharing interactions from around the world, including off the coast of California, Norway and New Zealand. Towers and his colleagues included their own encounters with orcas, as well as those described to them in interviews. Some of the interactions were also caught on camera. The team only included interactions where the orcas approached humans of their own accord, when humans were in the sea, on boats or close to the shore, though the humans may have first put themselves in the vicinity of the orcas. In most cases, humans ignored the orcas' offering. Some of the orcas then recovered the item and shared it with other orcas, and in a few cases, returned to offer it to the human again — even trying multiple times. On three occasions, humans returned the offering, and the orcas then offered it again, according to the study. Orcas are intelligent and communal creatures that engage in complicated social rituals, from gently nibbling on each other's tongues to tumbling alongside each other in the marine mammal equivalent of mosh pits. This also isn't the first time orcas have interacted with people. For example, an orca population used to hunt alongside Indigenous Australian whalers and European whalers in Australia. However, orcas got food out of those cooperative hunts, while in the new study, they were often giving it away without a clear motive. They can also be incredibly playful animals and sometimes toy with food and other objects in their environment. For example, researchers have documented orcas tossing around and killing baby porpoises that they have no intention of eating. Some orcas famously have a penchant for attacking boats off southwestern Europe's Iberian coast, which again appears to have a playful component. However, the researchers found that the orcas in the new study usually weren't playing with the food they offered. "With all the comments about orca play behaviour in relation to the Iberian orcas bending and breaking rudders of boats, it could be easy to dismiss these [offerings] as isolated incidents representing no more than another kind of play," Hoyt said. "But [the] authors point out that the provisioning/prey sharing happens equally between all sex and age classes, not just by the younger members who more actively engage in play." RELATED STORIES —Salmon-hat wearing orcas also give each other massages with kelp, scientists discover —Living lunch box? Iceland orcas are unexpectedly swimming with baby pilot whales, but it's unclear why. —'Incredible and rare' sight as endangered whale attacked by 60 orcas in brutal hunt Different orca populations have their own dialects, similar to human language, and can develop their own unique "fads," such as swimming around with dead salmon on their heads. The newly documented behavior wasn't confined to a specific population or location, but the researchers did find that it only involved orcas that typically hunt and share prey near the surface, which could help explain its origin. All of the orcas documented in the study were generalist hunters, typically eating a range of air-breathing animals like whales, as well as fish usually found near the surface. None of the cases involved orcas that exclusively feed on fish, often at depths, despite some of these orcas being very familiar with people. Hoyt said this aspect of the study was fascinating but also logical. "Salmon and other fish are often hunted singly, not cooperatively," Hoyt said. "The [orca] whales that hunt marine mammals, sharks and other larger prey are much more often sharing the large prey items they catch with their pods and not just because there's plenty to go around."

454 Hints That a Chatbot Wrote Part of a Biomedical Researcher's Paper
454 Hints That a Chatbot Wrote Part of a Biomedical Researcher's Paper

New York Times

time12 hours ago

  • New York Times

454 Hints That a Chatbot Wrote Part of a Biomedical Researcher's Paper

Scientists know it is happening, even if they don't do it themselves. Some of their peers are using chatbots, like ChatGPT, to write all or part of their papers. In a paper published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, Dmitry Kobak of the University of Tübingen and his colleagues report that they found a way to track how often researchers are using artificial intelligence chatbots to write the abstracts of their papers. The A.I. tools, they say, tend to use certain words — like 'delves,' 'crucial,' 'potential,' 'significant' and 'important' — far more often than human authors do. The group analyzed word use in the abstracts of more than 15 million biomedical abstracts published between 2010 and 2024, enabling them to spot the rising frequency of certain words in abstracts. The findings tap into a debate in the sciences over when it is and is not appropriate to use A.I. helpers for writing papers. When ChatGPT was introduced in November 2022, a collection of words started showing up with unusual frequency. Those words, the investigators report, were not used so often before the release of ChatGPT. They infer that the change in word usage is a telltale sign of A.I. In 2024, there were a total of 454 words used excessively by chatbots, the researchers report. Based on the frequency of the A.I.-favored words, Dr. Kobak and his team calculate that at least 13.5 percent of all biomedical abstracts appeared to have been written with the help of chatbots. And as many as 40 percent of abstracts by authors from some countries writing in a few less selective journals were A.I.-generated. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store