News
A great white shark has been spotted in South Africa's False Bay over 18 months after disappearing from the popular feeding ground. It was thought the predators left the area after killer whales ...
False Bay, on the country's southwest coast, was once a prominent great white feeding ground where sharks would regularly breach the surface to catch prey. However, ...
False Bay, on Cape Town's eastern coast, has long been one of the world's premier locations to spot and interact with white sharks - and a key attraction for the region's $2.5 billion per-year ...
Filming took place in the frigid waters of False Bay in the Atlantic, near Cape Town, between the Cape Peninsula and the mountains in the extreme south-west of South Africa. The mouth of the bay ...
Around 2010, white shark numbers around False Bay started dropping off, and the decline got steeper from 2015 on. By 2018, the great whites were gone. Exactly why the sharks vanished remains a ...
Did orcas scare off False Bay’s cow sharks? And what became of the great whites? Marine biologist Leigh de Necker and the Shark Spotters research team tried to solve the mystery.
Something fishy is under way in the waters of False Bay at the southern tip of South Africa, one of the world's best-known locations for viewing and interacting with the fearsome great white sharks.
False Bay is one of South Africa’s biodiversity hubs, and no-one knows what impact the octopus fishing industry is having on all other marine species. ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results