|alt=A white shark surfacing with its mouth open White sharks are estimated to swim but can sprint up to . One individual was recorded cruising at a sustained speed of while migrating, which is fast for a shark and more similar to fast-swimming
tuna. How they sleep is not well understood. At night, one individual was recorded swimming slowly in one direction along a current with its mouth open. The white shark is generally considered to be a solitary species, though aggregations do occur. A 2016 study of sharks around
Mossel Bay, South Africa, concluded that white shark associations are generally random with few social interactions. By contrast, a 2019 study found that sharks around Neptune Islands gathered in non-random aggregations. Similarly, a 2022 study of white sharks at Guadalupe Island suggested that individuals may associate so that they can learn from others where to find prey or carcasses to scavenge. White shark aggregations can consist of individuals of a specific age and sex. At Neptune Islands, sightings of subadult females peak during April and May, subadult males in February and again in September, adult females in June, and adult males in September.
Diet and feeding |alt=closeup of teeth marks on the back of a sea lion The white shark is an
apex predator that opportunistically feeds on fish,
cephalopods (like
squid), marine mammals,
sea birds, and
sea turtles. Diet differs based on size and age; individuals over can feed on marine mammals, while juveniles are limited to smaller prey like fish and cephalopods. White sharks prefer prey with high fat content, but even large individuals are recorded to eat low-fat foods. Marine mammals preyed on include
seals and
cetaceans (like
dolphins). White sharks are also recorded to bite
sea otters but do not usually consume them. The seasonal availability of seals drives white shark migration to certain locations. Targeted species include
gray seals,
harbor seals,
northern elephant seals,
California sea lions,
Cape fur seals and
New Zealand fur seals. White sharks mainly hunt seals by
ambush and normally target newly weaned young, as they have thick blubber but are still small and inexperienced. bull elephant seals are particularly formidable, being as massive as adult white sharks. Observations off California show that white sharks typically ambush seals from below, seizing them near the surface and dragging them under. The strike location often depends on the prey's anatomy:
earless seals (like elephant seals) are usually struck near the head or hind flippers, while
eared seals (like sea lions) are grabbed behind the torso. While the long fore-flippers of eared seals can disrupt a shark's aim and force a less secure bite, the resulting blood loss often leaves the seal vulnerable to a second, fatal attack. Prey is released after it dies of blood loss, and the shark feeds on the carcass after it floats to the surface. In 1984, Timothy Tricas and John McCosker suggested that white sharks bite seals, release them, and then wait for them to bleed to death before eating based on observations at
Dangerous Reef, South Australia. Off South Africa, ambushes on Cape fur seals usually involve the shark leaping or
breaching out of the water. Sharks may breach partially or entirely out of the water at different angles, clearing up to around when airborne. Missed seals may be chased after; such
pursuits involve the prey using its speed and agility to escape as the shark employs various maneuvers to catch them. The longer the chase, the less likely the shark is to succeed. White sharks in Cape Cod hunt seals in shallow water, relying on the murkiness of the water for concealment and striking them from the sides. , South Africa|alt=Shark eating carcass Cetacean species recorded as prey include small
toothed whales like
bottlenose dolphins,
common dolphins,
Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins,
striped dolphins,
Risso's dolphins, and
harbor porpoises. White sharks have been recorded preying on small
humpback whales on two separate occasions; both victims were weakened by net entanglement. One whale was killed by a pair of sharks using strategic biting, while the other was drowned by a single shark. White sharks are more likely to
scavenge large whales than hunt them. When a carcass is available, multiple sharks will gorge themselves, ripping off chunks by shaking their heads side-to-side. They may spit out pieces, possibly judging them to be too low in energy, using their teeth to
detect pressure and assess the fat content. The sharks do not appear to act aggressively towards each other, but accidental bites can occur. They eventually become
lethargic from overconsumption; they can no longer lift their heads out of the water, nor can they get in a good bite as they bump into the dead whale. White sharks feed on numerous fish species, including other sharks. One 2023 study found that juvenile and subadult white sharks off the east coast of Australia fed primarily on
ray-finned fishes, particularly
flathead grey mullets,
Japanese scads, and various species of
porgies,
mackerels, and
tuna. Off California, white sharks will eat
cabezons,
white seabasses,
lingcod,
halibut,
leopard sharks,
smooth-hounds,
spiny dogfishes,
school sharks,
stingrays,
bat rays, and
skates. In the Mediterranean, they consume
Atlantic bluefin tunas,
bullet tunas,
Atlantic bonitos,
swordfishes,
blue sharks,
shortfin makos, and stingrays. An
ocean sunfish was also recorded in a white shark's stomach. They are also recorded to consume cephalopods, as evidenced by
beaks found in their stomachs. Off South Africa, white sharks under were found with remains of coastal and bottom-dwelling species like certain
octopus species, as well as species of the genera
Sepia and
Loligo, while larger sharks seem to prefer more open-ocean species like those of the genera
Ancistrocheirus,
Octopoteuthis,
Lycoteuthis,
Ornithoteuthis,
Chiroteuthis, and
Argonauta. Near Guadalupe, white sharks have been documented with scars that appear to have been caused by
neon flying squids,
jumbo squids, and
giant squids. Both fish and cephalopods may be important food sources at the
White Shark Café. and bites have been recorded on
leatherback sea turtles off central California. Around
Seal Island, South Africa, white sharks are recorded to attack and kill seabirds like
Cape cormorants,
white-breasted cormorants,
kelp gulls,
Cape gannets,
brown skuas,
sooty shearwaters, and
African penguins but rarely consume them.
Social communication White sharks communicate with each other through a complex array of
body language. Most behaviors have been observed at aggregations around seal rookeries shortly after peak hunting periods, where sharks engage in extensive socializing. At least 20 unique forms of body language are known, most of which consist of two sharks swimming in passing, parallel, or circular patterns to ritualistically examine one another. Occasionally, one shark will openly show off its body in a lateral display to the other. The contest is "won" by the shark that compels the other to concede via the most tenacious splashing, which appears to signal strength and vigor. Larger body size does not always secure superior signal strength; on occasion, the smaller shark emerges victorious. White sharks have also been observed employing tail splashing to intimidate
tiger sharks around a whale carcass and even against boats and shark cages, which were likely perceived as competitors. Females at Guadalupe and Cape Cod have been seen with scarring that may have been the result of copulation, possible evidence that these areas are used for mating. Conversely, other studies have concluded that white sharks may mate offshore; males off western North America were found to gather in the open ocean during spring and were followed by some females, suggesting a
lek mating system where females move through and choose their partners. In 2013, it was proposed that whale carcasses are an important location for sexually mature sharks to meet for mating, especially with the frenzied excitement. After around 12 months, the female gives live birth to two to ten pups. It takes at least two more years until she gives birth again. White sharks are born at a length of . In July 2023, a possible newborn white shark was filmed for the first time, off the coast of southern California (just off
Carpinteria), measuring an estimated and with a pale complexion attributed to histotrophy. A follow-up study confirmed the Carpinteria shark was a newborn but suggests that the paleness is embryonic
epithelium covering the shark's skin denticles. This is known to exist in the related salmon shark and rubs off shortly after birth. Bands in the shark's vertebrae are used to determine the animal's age and growth. Early studies determined that the species grows relatively quickly; a 1985 study concluded that white sharks reach maturity nine to ten years of age at a length of . Conversely, a 2015 study concluded that white sharks are a slow-growing and long-lived species. Males reach maturity at approximately 26 years and a length of around , while females take 33 years to reach maturity at a length of around . Their growth rate levels off after the age of 40.
Mortality and health killing a juvenile white shark in the
Gulf of California|alt=Aerial view of an orca holding a small white shark White sharks are estimated to reach over 70 years of age. Another similar attack apparently occurred there in 2000, but its outcome is not clear. Orca predation has since been documented on white sharks in other areas. Around South Africa, orcas typically hunt white sharks in groups of two to six. By flipping the sharks belly up, the whales trigger a paralytic state known as
tonic immobility, allowing them to precisely target and consume the sharks' energy-rich livers. In 2017, a live white shark was sighted with purported orca teeth marks, providing the first evidence of the species surviving such an attack. White sharks often evacuate an area when orcas arrive, as has been documented both off South Africa and California. However, a 2026 study near Neptune Islands concluded that orcas alone are unlikely to cause white sharks to leave an area long-term. In addition to orcas, white sharks may fall prey to other sharks, including older white sharks, as pups and juveniles. As many as 116 parasite species infest white sharks, including
copepod crustaceans—such as
Nesippus orientalis,
Nemesis lamna, and
Dinemoura latifolia—which attach to the skin, fins, mouth, and gills. The white shark is the
primiary host of two species of
tapeworms from the genus
Clistobothrium;
Clistobothrium carcharodoni and
Clistobothrium tumidum. while the transmission source of
C. tumidum is unknown. The intensity of
C. carcharodoni infestations can be remarkably high; in one documented case, as many as 2,533 specimens were recovered from the spiral valve of a single individual. ==Relationship with humans==