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Megalodon (''Otodus megalodon''), meaning "big tooth", is an
extinct Extinction is the termination of a kind of organism or of a group of kinds (taxon), usually a species. The moment of extinction is generally considered to be the death of the last individual of the species, although the capacity to breed and ...
species of mackerel shark that lived approximately 23 to 3.6 million years ago (Mya), from the Early Miocene to the Pliocene epochs. It was formerly thought to be a member of the family Lamnidae and a close relative of the great white shark (''Carcharodon carcharias''). However, it is now classified into the extinct family Otodontidae, which diverged from the great white shark during the
Early Cretaceous The Early Cretaceous ( geochronological name) or the Lower Cretaceous (chronostratigraphic name), is the earlier or lower of the two major divisions of the Cretaceous. It is usually considered to stretch from 145  Ma to 100.5 Ma. Geology Pro ...
. While regarded as one of the largest and most powerful predators to have ever lived, the megalodon is only known from fragmentary remains, and its appearance and maximum size are uncertain. Scientists differ on whether it would have more closely resembled a stockier version of the great white shark, the whale shark (''Rhincodon typus''), the basking shark (''Cetorhinus maximus'') or the sand tiger shark (''Carcharias taurus''). The most recent estimate with the least error range suggests a maximum length estimate up to , although the modal lengths are estimated at . Extrapolation from a vertebral centra with dimensions based on the great white shark suggests that a megalodon about long weighs up to , long weighs up to , and long (the maximum length) weighs up to . Extrapolating from a vertebral column and reconstructing a 3D model with dimensions based on all extant lamnid sharks suggests that a individual may have been much larger than previous estimates, reaching an excess of in body mass; an individual of this size would have needed to consume 98,175 kcal per day. Their teeth were thick and robust, built for grabbing prey and breaking bone, and their large jaws could exert a bite force of up to . Megalodon probably had a major impact on the structure of marine communities. The fossil record indicates that it had a
cosmopolitan distribution In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of the world in appropriate habitats. Such a taxon, usually a species, is said to exhibit cosmopolitanism or cosmopolitism. The ext ...
. It probably targeted large prey, such as whales,
seals Seals may refer to: * Pinniped, a diverse group of semi-aquatic marine mammals, many of which are commonly called seals, particularly: ** Earless seal, or "true seal" ** Fur seal * Seal (emblem), a device to impress an emblem, used as a means of a ...
and sea turtles. Juveniles inhabited warm coastal waters and fed on fish and small whales. Unlike the great white, which attacks prey from the soft underside, megalodon probably used its strong jaws to break through the chest cavity and puncture the heart and lungs of its prey. The animal faced competition from whale-eating
cetacea Cetacea (; , ) is an infraorder of aquatic mammals that includes whales, dolphins, and porpoises. Key characteristics are their fully aquatic lifestyle, streamlined body shape, often large size and exclusively carnivorous diet. They propel them ...
ns, such as '' Livyatan'' and other macroraptorial sperm whales and possibly smaller ancestral killer whales. As the shark preferred warmer waters, it is thought that oceanic cooling associated with the onset of the ice ages, coupled with the lowering of sea levels and resulting loss of suitable nursery areas, may have also contributed to its decline. A reduction in the diversity of
baleen whale Baleen whales (systematic name Mysticeti), also known as whalebone whales, are a parvorder of carnivorous marine mammals of the infraorder Cetacea (whales, dolphins and porpoises) which use keratinaceous baleen plates (or "whalebone") in their ...
s and a shift in their distribution toward polar regions may have reduced megalodon's primary food source. The shark's extinction coincides with a
gigantism Gigantism ( el, γίγας, ''gígas'', "giant", plural γίγαντες, ''gígantes''), also known as giantism, is a condition characterized by excessive growth and height significantly above average. In humans, this condition is caused by ove ...
trend in baleen whales.


Taxonomy


Naming

According to Renaissance accounts, gigantic triangular fossil teeth often found embedded in rocky formations were once believed to be the petrified tongues, or
glossopetrae Sharks continually shed their teeth; some Carcharhiniformes shed approximately 35,000 teeth in a lifetime, replacing those that fall out. There are four basic types of shark teeth: dense flattened, needle-like, pointed lower with triangular upp ...
, of
dragon A dragon is a reptilian legendary creature that appears in the folklore of many cultures worldwide. Beliefs about dragons vary considerably through regions, but dragons in western cultures since the High Middle Ages have often been depicted as ...
s and snakes. This interpretation was corrected in 1667 by Danish naturalist Nicolas Steno, who recognized them as shark teeth, and famously produced a depiction of a shark's head bearing such teeth. He described his findings in the book ''The Head of a Shark Dissected'', which also contained an illustration of a megalodon tooth. Swiss naturalist
Louis Agassiz Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz ( ; ) FRS (For) FRSE (May 28, 1807 – December 14, 1873) was a Swiss-born American biologist and geologist who is recognized as a scholar of Earth's natural history. Spending his early life in Switzerland, he rec ...
gave this shark its initial
scientific name In taxonomy, binomial nomenclature ("two-term naming system"), also called nomenclature ("two-name naming system") or binary nomenclature, is a formal system of naming species of living things by giving each a name composed of two parts, bot ...
, ''Carcharodon megalodon'', in his 1843 work ''Recherches sur les poissons fossiles'', based on tooth remains. English paleontologist
Edward Charlesworth Edward Charlesworth (5 September 1813 – 28 July 1893) was an English geologist and palaeontologist. Edward Charlesworth was the eldest son of the Rev John Charlesworth. He studied medicine but abandoned a career in this discipline in 1836 to wo ...
in his 1837 paper used the name ''Carcharias megalodon'', while citing Agassiz as the author, indicating that Agassiz described the species prior to 1843. English paleontologist Charles Davies Sherborn in 1928 listed an 1835 series of articles by Agassiz as the first scientific description of the shark. The
specific name Specific name may refer to: * in Database management systems, a system-assigned name that is unique within a particular database In taxonomy, either of these two meanings, each with its own set of rules: * Specific name (botany), the two-part (bino ...
''megalodon'' translates to "big tooth", from grc, μέγας, (mégas), big, mighty and ὀδούς (''odoús''), "tooth". The teeth of megalodon are morphologically similar to those of the great white shark (''Carcharodon carcharias''), and on the basis of this observation, Agassiz assigned megalodon to the genus '' Carcharodon''. There was one apparent description of the shark in 1881 classifying it as ''Selache manzonii''.


Evolution

While the earliest megalodon remains have been reported from the Late Oligocene, around 28 million years ago (Mya), there is disagreement as to when it appeared, with dates ranging to as young as 16 mya. It has been thought that megalodon became extinct around the end of the Pliocene, about 2.6 Mya; claims of Pleistocene megalodon teeth, younger than 2.6 million years old, are considered unreliable. A 2019 assessment moves the extinction date back to earlier in the Pliocene, 3.6 Mya. Megalodon is now considered to be a member of the family Otodontidae, genus ''Otodus'', as opposed to its previous classification into Lamnidae, genus ''Carcharodon''. Megalodon's classification into ''Carcharodon'' was due to dental similarity with the great white shark, but most authors currently believe that this is due to convergent evolution. In this model, the great white shark is more closely related to the extinct
broad-toothed mako ''Cosmopolitodus'' is an extinct genus of mackerel shark that lived between thirty to one million years ago during the late Oligocene to the Early Pleistocene epochs. Its type species is ''Cosmopolitodus hastalis'', the broad-tooth mako (other ...
(''
Isurus hastalis ''Cosmopolitodus'' is an extinct genus of mackerel shark that lived between thirty to one million years ago during the late Oligocene to the Early Pleistocene epochs. Its type species is ''Cosmopolitodus hastalis'', the broad-tooth mako (other ...
'') than to megalodon, as evidenced by more similar dentition in those two sharks; megalodon teeth have much finer serrations than great white shark teeth. The great white shark is more closely related to the mako shark (''Isurus'' spp.), with a common ancestor around 4 Mya. Proponents of the former model, wherein megalodon and the great white shark are more closely related, argue that the differences between their dentition are minute and obscure. The genus ''Carcharocles'' currently contains four species: ''
C. auriculatus ''Otodus auriculatus'' is an extinct species of large sharks in the genus '' Otodus'' of the family Otodontidae, closely related to the sharks of the genus '' Otodus'', and also closely related to the later species megalodon. Its teeth were larg ...
'', '' C. angustidens'', ''
C. chubutensis ''Otodus chubutensis'', meaning "ear-shaped tooth of Chubut", from Ancient Greek ὠτ (ōt, meaning "ear") and ὀδούς (odoús, meaning "tooth") – thus, "ear-shaped tooth", is an extinct species of prehistoric megatoothed sharks in the ge ...
'', and ''C. megalodon''. The evolution of this lineage is characterized by the increase of serrations, the widening of the crown, the development of a more triangular shape, and the disappearance of the lateral cusps. The evolution in tooth morphology reflects a shift in predation tactics from a tearing-grasping bite to a cutting bite, likely reflecting a shift in prey choice from fish to cetaceans. Lateral cusplets were finally lost in a gradual process that took roughly 12 million years during the transition between ''C. chubutensis'' and ''C. megalodon''. The genus was proposed by D. S. Jordan and H. Hannibal in 1923 to contain ''C. auriculatus''. In the 1980s, megalodon was assigned to ''Carcharocles''. Before this, in 1960, the genus ''Procarcharodon'' was erected by French
ichthyologist Ichthyology is the branch of zoology devoted to the study of fish, including bony fish ( Osteichthyes), cartilaginous fish (Chondrichthyes), and jawless fish (Agnatha). According to FishBase, 33,400 species of fish had been described as of Octobe ...
Edgard Casier, which included those four sharks and was considered separate from the great white shark. It is now considered a
junior synonym The Botanical and Zoological Codes of nomenclature treat the concept of synonymy differently. * In botanical nomenclature, a synonym is a scientific name that applies to a taxon that (now) goes by a different scientific name. For example, Linna ...
of ''Carcharocles''. The genus '' Palaeocarcharodon'' was erected alongside ''Procarcharodon'' to represent the beginning of the lineage, and, in the model wherein megalodon and the great white shark are closely related, their last common ancestor. It is believed to be an evolutionary dead-end and unrelated to the ''Carcharocles'' sharks by authors who reject that model. Another model of the evolution of this genus, also proposed by Casier in 1960, is that the direct ancestor of the ''Carcharocles'' is the shark '' Otodus obliquus'', which lived from the Paleocene through the Miocene epochs, 60 to 13 Mya. The genus ''Otodus'' is ultimately derived from ''
Cretolamna ''Cretalamna'' is a genus of extinct otodontid shark that lived from the latest Early Cretaceous to Eocene epoch (about 103 to 46 million years ago). It is considered by many to be the ancestor of the largest sharks to have ever lived, ''Otodu ...
'', a shark from the Cretaceous period. In this model, ''O. obliquus'' evolved into ''O. aksuaticus'', which evolved into ''C. auriculatus'', and then into ''C. angustidens'', and then into ''C. chubutensis'', and then finally into ''C. megalodon''. Another model of the evolution of ''Carcharocles'', proposed in 2001 by paleontologist
Michael Benton Michael James Benton One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from the royalsociety.org website where: (born 8 April 1956) is a British palaeontologist, and professor of vertebrate palaeontology in the School of Earth Sciences ...
, is that the three other species are actually a single species of shark that gradually changed over time between the Paleocene and the Pliocene, making it a chronospecies. Some authors suggest that ''C. auriculatus'', ''C. angustidens'', and ''C. chubutensis'' should be classified as a single species in the genus ''Otodus'', leaving ''C. megalodon'' the sole member of ''Carcharocles''. The genus ''Carcharocles'' may be invalid, and the shark may actually belong in the genus ''Otodus'', making it ''Otodus megalodon''. A 1974 study on Paleogene sharks by Henri Cappetta erected the
subgenus In biology, a subgenus (plural: subgenera) is a taxonomic rank directly below genus. In the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, a subgeneric name can be used independently or included in a species name, in parentheses, placed between t ...
''Megaselachus'', classifying the shark as ''Otodus'' (''Megaselachus'') ''megalodon'', along with ''O. (M.) chubutensis''. A 2006 review of Chondrichthyes elevated ''Megaselachus'' to genus, and classified the sharks as ''Megaselachus megalodon'' and ''M. chubutensis''. The discovery of fossils assigned to the genus '' Megalolamna'' in 2016 led to a re-evaluation of ''Otodus'', which concluded that it is
paraphyletic In taxonomy (general), taxonomy, a group is paraphyletic if it consists of the group's most recent common ancestor, last common ancestor and most of its descendants, excluding a few Monophyly, monophyletic subgroups. The group is said to be pa ...
, that is, it consists of a last common ancestor but it does not include all of its descendants. The inclusion of the ''Carcharocles'' sharks in ''Otodus'' would make it
monophyletic In cladistics for a group of organisms, monophyly is the condition of being a clade—that is, a group of taxa composed only of a common ancestor (or more precisely an ancestral population) and all of its lineal descendants. Monophyletic gro ...
, with the sister clade being ''Megalolamna''. The cladogram below represents the hypothetical relationships between megalodon and other sharks, including the great white shark. Modified from Shimada et al. (2016), Ehret et al, (2009), and the findings of Siversson et al. (2013).


Biology


Appearance

One interpretation on how megalodon appeared was that it was a robust-looking shark, and may have had a similar build to the great white shark. The jaws may have been blunter and wider than the great white, and the fins would have also been similar in shape, though thicker due to its size. It may have had a pig-eyed appearance, in that it had small, deep-set eyes. Another interpretation is that megalodon bore a similarity to the whale shark (''Rhincodon typus'') or the basking shark (''Cetorhinus maximus''). The tail fin would have been crescent-shaped, the anal fin and second dorsal fin would have been small, and there would have been a caudal keel present on either side of the tail fin (on the caudal peduncle). This build is common in other large aquatic animals, such as whales, tuna, and other sharks, in order to reduce
drag Drag or The Drag may refer to: Places * Drag, Norway, a village in Tysfjord municipality, Nordland, Norway * ''Drág'', the Hungarian name for Dragu Commune in Sălaj County, Romania * Drag (Austin, Texas), the portion of Guadalupe Street adj ...
while swimming. The head shape can vary between species as most of the drag-reducing adaptations are toward the tail-end of the animal. Since ''Carcharocles'' is derived from ''Otodus'', and the two had teeth that bear a close similarity to those of the sand tiger shark (''Carcharias taurus''), megalodon may have had a build more similar to the sand tiger shark than to other sharks. This is unlikely since the sand tiger shark is a carangiform swimmer which requires faster movement of the tail for propulsion through the water than the great white shark, a thunniform swimmer.


Size

Due to fragmentary remains, there have been many contradictory size estimates for megalodon, as they can only be drawn from fossil teeth and vertebrae. The great white shark has been the basis of reconstruction and size estimation, as it is regarded as the best analogue to megalodon. Several total length estimation methods have been produced from comparing megalodon teeth and vertebrae to those of the great white. Megalodon size estimates vary depending on the method used, with maximum total length estimates ranging from . A 2015 study estimated the average total body length at , calculated from 544 megalodon teeth, found throughout geological time and geography, including adults and juveniles. In comparison, large great white sharks are generally around in length, with a few contentious reports suggesting larger sizes. The whale shark is the largest living fish, with one large female reported with a precaudal length of and an estimated total length of . It is possible that different populations of megalodon around the globe had different body sizes and behaviors due to different ecological pressures. Megalodon is thought to have been the largest macropredatory shark that ever lived. In his 2015 book, ''The Story of Life in 25 Fossils: Tales of Intrepid Fossil Hunters and the Wonders of Evolution'', Donald Prothero proposed the body mass estimates for different individiuals of different length by extrapolating from a vertebral centra based on the dimensions of the great white, a methodology also used for the 2008 study which supports the maximum mass estimate. In 2020, Cooper and his colleagues reconstructed a 2D model of megalodon based on the dimensions of all the extant lamnid sharks and suggested that a long megalodon would have had a long head, tall gill slits, a tall dorsal fin, long pectoral fins, and a tall tail fin. In 2022, Cooper and his colleagues also reconstructed a 3D model with the same basis as the 2020 study, resulting in a body mass estimate of for a long megalodon (higher than the previous estimates); a vertebral column specimen named IRSNB P 9893 (formerly IRSNB 3121), belonging to a 46 year old individual from Belgium, was used for extrapolation. An individual of this size would have required 98,175 kcal per day, 20 times more than what the adult great white requires. Mature male megalodon may have had a body mass of , and mature females may have been , assuming that males could range in length from and females . A 2015 study linking shark size and typical swimming speed estimated that megalodon would have typically swum at –assuming that its body mass was typically –which is consistent with other aquatic creatures of its size, such as the fin whale (''Balaenoptera physalus'') which typically cruises at speeds of . In 2022, Cooper and his colleagues converted this calculation into relative cruising speed (body lengths per second), resulting in an mean absolute crusing speed of and a mean relative cruising speed of 0.09 body lengths per second for a long megalodon; the authors found their mean absolute cruising speed to be faster than any extant lamnid sharks and their mean relative cruising speed to be slower, consistent with previous estiamtes. Its large size may have been due to climatic factors and the abundance of large prey items, and it may have also been influenced by the evolution of regional endothermy (mesothermy) which would have increased its metabolic rate and swimming speed. The otodontid sharks have been considered to have been ectotherms, so on that basis megalodon would have been ectothermic. However, the largest contemporary ectothermic sharks, such as the whale shark, are filter feeders, while lamnids are now known to be regional endotherms, implying some metabolic correlations with a predatory lifestyle. These considerations, as well as tooth oxygen isotopic data and the need for higher burst swimming speeds in macropredators of endothermic prey than ectothermy would allow, imply that otodontids, including megalodon, were probably regional endotherms. In 2020, Shimada and colleagues suggested large size was instead due to intrauterine cannibalism, where the larger fetus eats the smaller fetus, resulting in progressively larger and larger fetuses, requiring the mother to attain even greater size as well as caloric requirements which would have promoted endothermy. Males would have needed to keep up with female size in order to still effectively copulate (which probably involved latching onto the female with claspers, like modern cartilaginous fish).


Maximum estimates

The first attempt to reconstruct the jaw of megalodon was made by Bashford Dean in 1909, displayed at the
American Museum of Natural History The American Museum of Natural History (abbreviated as AMNH) is a natural history museum on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City. In Theodore Roosevelt Park, across the street from Central Park, the museum complex comprises 26 inter ...
. From the dimensions of this jaw reconstruction, it was hypothesized that megalodon could have approached in length. Dean had overestimated the size of the cartilage on both jaws, causing it to be too tall. In 1973, John E. Randall, an
ichthyologist Ichthyology is the branch of zoology devoted to the study of fish, including bony fish ( Osteichthyes), cartilaginous fish (Chondrichthyes), and jawless fish (Agnatha). According to FishBase, 33,400 species of fish had been described as of Octobe ...
, used the enamel height (the vertical distance of the blade from the base of the enamel portion of the tooth to its tip) to measure the length of the shark, yielding a maximum length of about . However, tooth enamel height does not necessarily increase in proportion to the animal's total length. In 1994, marine biologists Patrick J. Schembri and Stephen Papson opined that ''O. megalodon'' may have approached a maximum of around in total length. In 1996, shark researchers Michael D. Gottfried, Leonard Compagno, and S. Curtis Bowman proposed a linear relationship between the great white shark's total length and the height of the largest upper anterior tooth. The proposed relationship is: total length in meters = − (0.096) × mm)">Millimetre.html" ;"title="A maximum height (Millimetre">mm)(0.22). Using this tooth height regression equation, the authors estimated a total length of based on a tooth tall, which the authors considered a conservative maximum estimate. They also compared the ratio between the tooth height and total length of large female great whites to the largest megalodon tooth. A long female great white, which the authors considered the largest 'reasonably trustworthy' total length, produced an estimate of . However, based on the largest female great white reported, at , they estimated a maximum estimate of . In 2002, shark researcher Clifford Jeremiah proposed that total length was proportional to the root width of an upper anterior tooth. He claimed that for every of root width, there are approximately of shark length. Jeremiah pointed out that the jaw perimeter of a shark is directly proportional to its total length, with the width of the roots of the largest teeth being a tool for estimating jaw perimeter. The largest tooth in Jeremiah's possession had a root width of about , which yielded in total length. In 2002, paleontologist Kenshu Shimada of DePaul University proposed a linear relationship between tooth crown height and total length after conducting anatomical analysis of several specimens, allowing any sized tooth to be used. Shimada stated that the previously proposed methods were based on a less-reliable evaluation of the dental
homology Homology may refer to: Sciences Biology *Homology (biology), any characteristic of biological organisms that is derived from a common ancestor * Sequence homology, biological homology between DNA, RNA, or protein sequences *Homologous chrom ...
between megalodon and the great white shark, and that the growth rate between the crown and root is not
isometric The term ''isometric'' comes from the Greek for "having equal measurement". isometric may mean: * Cubic crystal system, also called isometric crystal system * Isometre, a rhythmic technique in music. * "Isometric (Intro)", a song by Madeon from ...
, which he considered in his model. Using this model, the upper anterior tooth possessed by Gottfried and colleagues corresponded to a total length of . Among several specimens found in the Gatún Formation of Panama, one upper lateral tooth was used by other researchers to obtain a total length estimate of using this method. In 2019, Shimada revisited the size of megalodon and discouraged using non-anterior teeth for estimations, noting that the exact position of isolated non-anterior teeth is difficult to identify. Shimada provided maximum total length estimates using the largest anterior teeth available in museums. The tooth with the tallest crown height known to Shimada, NSM PV-19896, produced a total length estimate of . The tooth with the tallest total height, FMNH PF 11306, was reported at . However, Shimada remeasured the tooth and found it actually to measure . Using the total height tooth regression equation proposed by Gottfried and colleagues produced an estimate of . In 2021, Victor J. Perez, Ronny M. Leder, and Teddy Badaut proposed a method of estimating total length of megalodon from the sum of the tooth crown widths. Using more complete megalodon dentitions, they reconstructed the dental formula and then made comparisons to living sharks. The researchers noted that the 2002 Shimada crown height equations produce wildly varying results for different teeth belonging to the same shark (range of error of ± ), casting doubt on some of the conclusions of previous studies using that method. Using the largest tooth available to the authors, GHC 6, with a crown width of , they estimated a maximum body length of approximately , with a range of error of approximately ± . This maximum length estimate was also supported by Cooper and his colleagues in 2022. There are anecdotal reports of teeth larger than those found in museum collections. Gordon Hubbell from
Gainesville, Florida Gainesville is the county seat of Alachua County, Florida, Alachua County, Florida, and the largest city in North Central Florida, with a population of 141,085 in 2020. It is the principal city of the Gainesville metropolitan area, Florida, Gaine ...
, possesses an upper anterior megalodon tooth whose maximum height is , one of the largest known tooth specimens from the shark. In addition, a megalodon jaw reconstruction developed by fossil hunter Vito Bertucci contains a tooth whose maximum height is reportedly over .


Teeth and bite force

The most common fossils of megalodon are its teeth. Diagnostic characteristics include a triangular shape, robust structure, large size, fine serrations, a lack of lateral denticles, and a visible V-shaped neck (where the root meets the crown). The tooth met the jaw at a steep angle, similar to the great white shark. The tooth was anchored by connective tissue fibers, and the roughness of the base may have added to mechanical strength. The lingual side of the tooth, the part facing the tongue, was convex; and the labial side, the other side of the tooth, was slightly convex or flat. The anterior teeth were almost perpendicular to the jaw and symmetrical, whereas the posterior teeth were slanted and asymmetrical. Megalodon teeth can measure over in slant height (diagonal length) and are the largest of any known shark species, implying it was the largest of all macropredatory sharks. In 1989, a nearly complete set of megalodon teeth was discovered in Saitama, Japan. Another nearly complete associated megalodon dentition was excavated from the Yorktown Formations in the United States, and served as the basis of a jaw reconstruction of megalodon at the National Museum of Natural History (USNM). Based on these discoveries, an artificial dental formula was put together for megalodon in 1996. The dental formula of megalodon is: . As evident from the formula, megalodon had four kinds of teeth in its jaws: anterior, intermediate, lateral, and posterior. Megalodon's intermediate tooth technically appears to be an upper anterior and is termed as "A3" because it is fairly symmetrical and does not point mesially (side of the tooth toward the midline of the jaws where the left and right jaws meet). Megalodon had a very robust dentition, and had over 250 teeth in its jaws, spanning 5 rows. It is possible that large megalodon individuals had jaws spanning roughly across. The teeth were also serrated, which would have improved efficiency in cutting through flesh or bone. The shark may have been able to open its mouth to a 75° angle, though a reconstruction at the USNM approximates a 100° angle. In 2008, a team of scientists led by S. Wroe conducted an experiment to determine the bite force of the great white shark, using a long specimen, and then isometrically scaled the results for its maximum size and the conservative minimum and maximum body mass of megalodon. They placed the bite force of the latter between in a posterior bite, compared to the bite force for the largest confirmed great white shark, and for the placoderm fish '' Dunkleosteus''. In addition, Wroe and colleagues pointed out that sharks shake sideways while feeding, amplifying the force generated, which would probably have caused the total force experienced by prey to be higher than the estimate. In 2021, Antonio Ballell and Humberto Ferrón used
Finite Element Analysis The finite element method (FEM) is a popular method for numerically solving differential equations arising in engineering and mathematical modeling. Typical problem areas of interest include the traditional fields of structural analysis, heat ...
modeling to examine the stress distribution of three types of megalodon teeth and closely related mega-toothed species when exposed to anterior and lateral forces, the latter of which would be generated when a shark shakes its head to tear through flesh. The resulting simulations identified higher levels of stress in megalodon teeth under lateral force loads compared to its precursor species such as ''O. obliquus'' and ''O. angusteidens'' when tooth size was removed as a factor. This suggests that megalodon teeth were of a different functional significance than previously expected, challenging prior interpretations that megalodon's dental morphology was primarily driven by a dietary shift towards marine mammals. Instead, the authors proposed that it was a byproduct of an increase in body size caused by heterochronic selection.


Internal anatomy

Megalodon is represented in the fossil record by teeth,
vertebral centra The spinal column, a defining synapomorphy shared by nearly all vertebrates,Hagfish are believed to have secondarily lost their spinal column is a moderately flexible series of vertebrae (singular vertebra), each constituting a characteristic ...
, and coprolites. As with all sharks, the
skeleton A skeleton is the structural frame that supports the body of an animal. There are several types of skeletons, including the exoskeleton, which is the stable outer shell of an organism, the endoskeleton, which forms the support structure inside ...
of megalodon was formed of
cartilage Cartilage is a resilient and smooth type of connective tissue. In tetrapods, it covers and protects the ends of long bones at the joints as articular cartilage, and is a structural component of many body parts including the rib cage, the neck an ...
rather than bone; consequently most fossil specimens are poorly preserved. To support its large dentition, the jaws of megalodon would have been more massive, stouter, and more strongly developed than those of the great white, which possesses a comparatively gracile dentition. Its
chondrocranium The chondrocranium (or ''cartilaginous neurocranium'') is the primitive cartilage, cartilaginous skeleton, skeletal structure of the fetal skull that grows to envelop the rapidly growing embryonic brain.Salentijn, L. ''Biology of Mineralized Tissue ...
, the cartilaginous skull, would have had a blockier and more robust appearance than that of the great white. Its fins were proportional to its larger size. Some fossil vertebrae have been found. The most notable example is a partially preserved vertebral column of a single specimen, excavated in the Antwerp Basin, Belgium, in 1926. It comprises 150 vertebral centra, with the centra ranging from to in diameter. The shark's vertebrae may have gotten much bigger, and scrutiny of the specimen revealed that it had a higher vertebral count than specimens of any known shark, possibly over 200 centra; only the great white approached it. Another partially preserved vertebral column of a megalodon was excavated from the Gram Formation in Denmark in 1983, which comprises 20 vertebral centra, with the centra ranging from to in diameter. The coprolite remains of megalodon are spiral-shaped, indicating that the shark may have had a spiral valve, a corkscrew-shaped portion of the
lower intestines The gastrointestinal tract (GI tract, digestive tract, alimentary canal) is the tract or passageway of the digestive system that leads from the mouth to the anus. The GI tract contains all the major organs of the digestive system, in humans and ...
, similar to extant lamniform sharks. Miocene coprolite remains were discovered in Beaufort County, South Carolina, with one measuring . Gottfried and colleagues reconstructed the entire skeleton of megalodon, which was later put on display at the Calvert Marine Museum in the United States and the Iziko South African Museum. This reconstruction is long and represents a mature male, based on the ontogenetic changes a great white shark experiences over the course of its life.


Paleobiology


Range and habitat

Megalodon had a
cosmopolitan distribution In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of the world in appropriate habitats. Such a taxon, usually a species, is said to exhibit cosmopolitanism or cosmopolitism. The ext ...
; its fossils have been excavated from many parts of the world, including Europe, Africa, the Americas, and Australia. It most commonly occurred in
subtropical The subtropical zones or subtropics are geographical zone, geographical and Köppen climate classification, climate zones to the Northern Hemisphere, north and Southern Hemisphere, south of the tropics. Geographically part of the Geographical z ...
to temperate latitudes. It has been found at latitudes up to 55° N; its inferred tolerated temperature range was . It arguably had the capacity to endure such low temperatures due to mesothermy, the physiological capability of large sharks to maintain a higher body temperature than the surrounding water by conserving metabolic heat. Megalodon inhabited a wide range of marine environments (i.e., shallow coastal waters, areas of coastal upwelling, swampy coastal lagoons, sandy littorals, and offshore deep water environments), and exhibited a transient lifestyle. Adult megalodon were not abundant in shallow water environments, and mostly inhabited offshore areas. Megalodon may have moved between coastal and oceanic waters, particularly in different stages of its life cycle. Fossil remains show a trend for specimens to be larger on average in the Southern Hemisphere than in the Northern, with mean lengths of , respectively; and also larger in the Pacific than the Atlantic, with mean lengths of respectively. They do not suggest any trend of changing body size with absolute latitude, or of change in size over time (although the ''Carcharocles'' lineage in general is thought to display a trend of increasing size over time). The overall modal length has been estimated at , with the length distribution skewed towards larger individuals, suggesting an ecological or competitive advantage for larger body size.


Locations of fossils

Megalodon had a global distribution and fossils of the shark have been found in many places around the world, bordering all oceans of the
Neogene The Neogene ( ), informally Upper Tertiary or Late Tertiary, is a geologic period and system that spans 20.45 million years from the end of the Paleogene Period million years ago ( Mya) to the beginning of the present Quaternary Period Mya. ...
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Prey relationships

Though sharks are generally opportunistic feeders, megalodon's great size, high-speed swimming capability, and powerful jaws, coupled with an impressive feeding apparatus, made it an apex predator capable of consuming a broad spectrum of animals. Otodus megalodon was probably one of the most powerful predators to have existed. A study focusing on
calcium isotopes Calcium (20Ca) has 26 known isotopes, ranging from 35Ca to 60Ca. There are five stable isotopes (40Ca, 42Ca, 43Ca, 44Ca and 46Ca), plus one isotope ( 48Ca) with such a long half-life that for all practical purposes it can be considered stable. ...
of extinct and extant elasmobranch sharks and rays revealed that megalodon fed at a higher trophic level than the contemporaneous great white shark ("higher up" in the food chain.){{cite journal, last1= Martin, first1= J. E., last2= Tacail, first2=T., last3=Sylvain, first3=A., last4=Catherine, first4= G., last5= Vincent, first5= B., title=Calcium isotopes reveal the trophic position of extant and fossil elasmobranchs, journal=Chemical Geology, year=2015, pages= 118–125 , doi=10.1016/j.chemgeo.2015.09.011, volume=415, bibcode= 2015ChGeo.415..118M Fossil evidence indicates that megalodon preyed upon many cetacean species, such as dolphins, small whales, cetotheres, squalodontids (shark toothed dolphins), sperm whales,
bowhead whale The bowhead whale (''Balaena mysticetus'') is a species of baleen whale belonging to the family Balaenidae and the only living representative of the genus ''Balaena''. They are the only baleen whale endemic to the Arctic and subarctic waters, ...
s, and
rorqual Rorquals () are the largest group of baleen whales, which comprise the family Balaenopteridae, containing ten extant species in three genera. They include the largest animal that has ever lived, the blue whale, which can reach , and the fin wha ...
s.{{cite journal, last=Morgan, first=Gary S., title=Whither the giant white shark?, url=https://www.priweb.org/files/pubtext/item_pdf_289.pdf, journal=Paleontology Topics, year=1994, volume=2, issue=3, pages=1–2, url-status=dead, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160722045756/https://www.priweb.org/files/pubtext/item_pdf_289.pdf, archive-date=22 July 2016 In addition to this, they also targeted seals, sirenians, and sea turtles. The shark was an opportunist and piscivorous, and it would have also gone after smaller fish and other sharks.{{cite book, chapter-url={{google books, plainurl=yes, id=QjkjBQAAQBAJ, page=96, first=D. R., last=Prothero, year=2015, title=The Story of Life in 25 Fossils, chapter=Mega-Jaws, publisher= Columbia University Press, location=New York, New York, pages=96–110, isbn=978-0-231-17190-8, oclc=897505111 Many whale bones have been found with deep gashes most likely made by their teeth.{{rp, 75 Various excavations have revealed megalodon teeth lying close to the chewed remains of whales,{{rp, 75 and sometimes in direct association with them.{{cite journal , last1=Augilera , first1=Orangel A. , last2=García , first2=Luis , last3=Cozzuol , first3=Mario A. , year=2008 , title=Giant-toothed white sharks and cetacean trophic interaction from the Pliocene Caribbean Paraguaná Formation , journal=Paläontologische Zeitschrift , volume=82 , issue=2 , pages=204–208 , doi=10.1007/BF02988410 , issn=0038-2353 , s2cid=84251638 The feeding ecology of megalodon appears to have varied with age and between sites, like the modern great white shark. It is plausible that the adult megalodon population off the coast of Peru targeted primarily cetothere whales {{convert, 2.5, to, 7, m, ft, sp=us, sigfig=2 in length and other prey smaller than itself, rather than large whales in the same size class as themselves.{{cite journal , first1 = A. , last1 = Collareta , first2 = O. , last2 = Lambert , first3 = W. , last3 = Landini , first4 = C. , last4 = Di Celma , first5 = E. , last5 = Malinverno , first6 = R. , last6 = Varas-Malca , first7 = M. , last7 = Urbina , first8 = G. , last8 = Bianucci , title = Did the giant extinct shark ''Carcharocles megalodon'' target small prey? Bite marks on marine mammal remains from the late Miocene of Peru , journal = Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology , volume = 469 , pages = 84–91 , doi = 10.1016/j.palaeo.2017.01.001 , year = 2017 , bibcode = 2017PPP...469...84C, hdl = 10281/151854 Meanwhile, juveniles likely had a diet that consisted more of fish.{{cite journal , first1 = W. , last1 = Landini , first2 = A. , last2 = Altamirano-Sera , first3 = A. , last3 = Collareta , first4 = C. , last4 = Di Celma , first5 = M. , last5 = Urbina , first6 = G. , last6 = Bianucci , title = The late Miocene elasmobranch assemblage from Cerro Colorado (Pisco Formation, Peru) , year = 2017 , volume = 73 , pages = 168–190 , journal = Journal of South American Earth Sciences , doi = 10.1016/j.jsames.2016.12.010 , bibcode = 2017JSAES..73..168L


Competition

Megalodon faced a highly competitive environment.{{Cite journal, doi= 10.1038/nature09067, last1=Lambert, first1=O., last2=Bianucci, first2=G., last3=Post, first3= P., last4=de Muizon, first4=C., last5=Salas-Gismondi, first5=R., last6=Urbina, first6=M., last7=Reumer, first7=J., title=The giant bite of a new raptorial sperm whale from the Miocene epoch of Peru, journal= Nature, volume= 466, issue= 7302, pages=105–108, year=2010, pmid=20596020, bibcode = 2010Natur.466..105L , s2cid=4369352 Its position at the top of the food chain{{Cite journal, doi=10.1007/BF00751027, last=Compagno, first=Leonard J. V., title = Alternative life-history styles of cartilaginous fishes in time and space, journal=Environmental Biology of Fishes, volume=28, issue=1–4, pages=33–75, year=1989, s2cid=22527888 probably had a significant impact on the structuring of marine communities. Fossil evidence indicates a correlation between megalodon and the
emergence In philosophy, systems theory, science, and art, emergence occurs when an entity is observed to have properties its parts do not have on their own, properties or behaviors that emerge only when the parts interact in a wider whole. Emergence ...
and diversification of cetaceans and other marine mammals.{{rp, 78 Juvenile megalodon preferred habitats where small cetaceans were abundant, and adult megalodon preferred habitats where large cetaceans were abundant. Such preferences may have developed shortly after they appeared in the Oligocene.{{rp, 74–75 Megalodon were contemporaneous with whale-eating toothed whales (particularly macroraptorial sperm whales and squalodontidae), which were also probably among the era's apex predators, and provided competition. Some attained gigantic sizes, such as '' Livyatan'', estimated between {{convert, 13.5, to, 17.5, m, ft, sp=us. Fossilized teeth of an undetermined species of such physeteroids from Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, indicate it had a maximum body length of 8–10 m and a maximum lifespan of about 25 years. This is very different from similarly sized modern killer whales that live to 65 years, suggesting that unlike the latter, which are apex predators, these physeteroids were subject to predation from larger species such as megalodon or ''Livyatan''.{{cite journal, last1=Gilbert, first1=K.N., last2=Ivany, first2=L.C., author-link2=Linda Ivany , last3=Uhen, first3=M.D., year=2018, title=Living fast and dying young: life history and ecology of a Neogene sperm whale, journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, volume=38, issue=2, pages=e1439038, doi=10.1080/02724634.2018.1439038, s2cid=89750852 By the
Late Miocene The Late Miocene (also known as Upper Miocene) is a sub-epoch of the Miocene epoch (geology), Epoch made up of two faunal stage, stages. The Tortonian and Messinian stages comprise the Late Miocene sub-epoch, which lasted from 11.63 Ma (million ye ...
, around 11 Mya, macroraptorials experienced a significant decline in abundance and diversity. Other species may have filled this niche in the Pliocene,{{Cite journal, last1=Heyning, first1=John, last2=Dahlheim, first2=Marilyn, title=Orcinus orca, journal=Mammalian Species, issue=304, pages=1–9, year=1988, url=http://www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/VHAYSSEN/msi/pdf/i0076-3519-304-01-0001.pdf, doi=10.2307/3504225, jstor=3504225, s2cid=253914153 , url-status=dead, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101205083613/http://www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/VHAYSSEN/msi/pdf/i0076-3519-304-01-0001.pdf, archive-date=5 December 2010 such as the fossil killer whale ''
Orcinus citoniensis ''Orcinus citoniensis'' is an extinct species of killer whale identified in the Late Pliocene of Italy and the Early Pleistocene of England. It was smaller than the modern killer whale (''O. orca''), versus , and had around 8 more teeth in its ...
'' which may have been a pack predator and targeted prey larger than itself, but this inference is disputed, and it was probably a generalist predator rather than a marine mammal specialist.{{cite journal, url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/244994854, first= G., last= Bianucci, year= 1997, title= ''Hemisyntrachelus cortesii'' (Cetacea, Delphinidae) from the Pliocene Sediments of Campore Quarry (Salsomaggiori Terme, Italy, journal= Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana, volume= 36, issue= 1, pages= 75–83) Megalodon may have subjected contemporaneous white sharks to competitive exclusion, as the fossil records indicate that other shark species avoided regions it inhabited by mainly keeping to the colder waters of the time.{{Cite journal, last1=Antunes, first1=M.T., last2=Legoinha, first2=P., last3=Balbing, first3=A., title=Megalodon, mako shark and planktonic foraminifera from the continental shelf off Portugal and their age, journal=Geologica Acta, volume=13, pages=181–190, year=2015, url=http://dspace.uevora.pt/rdpc/handle/10174/17685{{rp, 77 In areas where their ranges seemed to have overlapped, such as in Pliocene Baja California, it is possible that megalodon and the great white shark occupied the area at different times of the year while following different migratory prey.{{rp, 77 Megalodon probably also had a tendency for
cannibalism Cannibalism is the act of consuming another individual of the same species as food. Cannibalism is a common ecological interaction in the animal kingdom and has been recorded in more than 1,500 species. Human cannibalism is well documented, b ...
, much like contemporary sharks.


Feeding strategies

Sharks often employ complex hunting strategies to engage large prey animals. Great white shark hunting strategies may be similar to how megalodon hunted its large prey.{{cite journal, url=http://www.vmnh.net/content/File/Research_and_Collections/Jeffersoniana_Number_16.pdf, first1=S. J., last1=Godfrey, first2=J., last2=Altman, year=2005, title=A Miocene Cetacean Vertebra Showing a Partially Healed Compression Factor, the Result of Convulsions or Failed Predation by the Giant White Shark, ''Carcharodon megalodon'', journal=Jeffersoniana, number=16, pages=1–12 Megalodon bite marks on whale fossils suggest that it employed different hunting strategies against large prey than the great white shark. One particular specimen–the remains of a {{convert, 9, m, ft, sp=us, adj=on long undescribed Miocene baleen whale–provided the first opportunity to quantitatively analyze its attack behavior. Unlike great whites which target the underbelly of their prey, megalodon probably targeted the heart and lungs, with their thick teeth adapted for biting through tough bone, as indicated by bite marks inflicted to the rib cage and other tough bony areas on whale remains. Furthermore, attack patterns could differ for prey of different sizes. Fossil remains of some small cetaceans, for example cetotheres, suggest that they were rammed with great force from below before being killed and eaten, based on compression fractures. There is also evidence that a possible separate hunting strategy existed for attacking raptorial sperm whales; a tooth belonging to an undetermined {{convert, 4, m, ft, abbr=on physeteroid closely resembling those of '' Acrophyseter'' discovered in the Nutrien Aurora Phosphate Mine in North Carolina suggests that a megalodon or ''O. chubutensis'' may have aimed for the head of the sperm whale in order to inflict a fatal bite, the resulting attack leaving distinctive bite marks on the tooth. While scavenging behavior cannot be ruled out as a possibility, the placement of the bite marks is more consistent with predatory attacks than feeding by scavenging, as the jaw is not a particularly nutritious area to for a shark feed or focus on. The fact that the bite marks were found on the tooth's roots further suggest that the shark broke the whale's jaw during the bite, suggesting the bite was extremely powerful. The fossil is also notable as it stands as the first known instance of an antagonistic interaction between a sperm whale and an otodontid shark recorded in the fossil record. During the Pliocene, larger cetaceans appeared.{{cite journal, last1=Deméré, first1=Thomas A., last2=Berta, first2=Annalisa, last3=McGowen, first3=Michael R., year=2005, title=The taxonomic and evolutionary history of fossil and modern balaenopteroid mysticetes, journal=Journal of Mammalian Evolution, volume=12, issue=1/2, pages=99–143, doi=10.1007/s10914-005-6944-3, s2cid=90231 Megalodon apparently further refined its hunting strategies to cope with these large whales. Numerous fossilized flipper bones and
tail vertebrae The vertebral column, also known as the backbone or spine, is part of the axial skeleton. The vertebral column is the defining characteristic of a vertebrate in which the notochord (a flexible rod of uniform composition) found in all chordate ...
of large whales from the Pliocene have been found with megalodon bite marks, which suggests that megalodon would immobilize a large whale before killing and feeding on it.


Growth and reproduction

In 2021, Shimada and colleagues calculated the growth rate of an approximately {{cvt, 9.2, m individual based on the Belgian vertebrate column specimen that presumably contains annual growth rings on three of its vertebrae. They estimated the individual died at 46 years of age, with a growth rate of {{cvt, 16, cm per year, and a length of {{cvt, 2, m at birth. For a {{cvt, 15, m individual—which they considered to have been the maximum size attainable—this would equate to a lifespan of 88 to 100 years. However, Cooper and his colleagues in 2022 estimated the length of this 46 year old individual at nearly {{cvt, 16, m, ft based on the 3D reconstruction which resulted in the complete vertebral column to be {{cvt, 11.1, m, ft long; the researchers claimed that this size estimate difference occurred due to the fact that Shimada and his colleagues extrapolated its size only based on the vertebral centra. Megalodon, like contemporaneous sharks, made use of nursery areas to birth their young in, specifically warm-water coastal environments with large amounts of food and protection from predators. Nursery sites were identified in the Gatún Formation of Panama, the Calvert Formation of Maryland, Banco de Concepción in the
Canary Islands The Canary Islands (; es, Canarias, ), also known informally as the Canaries, are a Spanish autonomous community and archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean, in Macaronesia. At their closest point to the African mainland, they are west of Morocc ...
,{{cite web, url=http://www.europapress.es/islas-canarias/noticia-identifican-canarias-fosiles-megalodon-tiburon-mas-grande-mayor-depredador-marino-existido-20130902152010.html, publisher=Europa Press Noticias SA, title=Identifican en Canarias fósiles de 'megalodón', el tiburón más grande que ha existido, trans-title=Identifying Canary fossils of 'megalodon', the largest shark that ever lived, language=es, year=2013, access-date=29 August 2017 and the Bone Valley Formation of Florida. Given that all extant
lamniform The Lamniformes (, from Greek ''lamna'' "fish of prey") are an order of sharks commonly known as mackerel sharks (which may also refer specifically to the family Lamnidae). It includes some of the most familiar species of sharks, such as the gre ...
sharks give birth to live young, this is believed to have been true of megalodon also.{{cite journal, last1= Dulvy, first1=N. K., last2= Reynolds, first2=J. D., title= Evolutionary transitions among egg-laying, live-bearing and maternal inputs in sharks and rays, journal= Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, volume= 264, issue= 1386, year=1997, pages= 1309–1315, doi= 10.1098/rspb.1997.0181, pmc=1688595, bibcode=1997RSPSB.264.1309D Infant megalodons were around {{convert, 3.5, m, ft, sp=us, sigfig=2 at their smallest,{{rp, 61 and the pups were vulnerable to predation by other shark species, such as the
great hammerhead shark The great hammerhead (''Sphyrna mokarran'') or great hammerhead shark is the largest species of hammerhead shark, belonging to the family Sphyrnidae, attaining an average length of and reaching a maximum length of . It is found in tropical and w ...
(''Sphyrna mokarran'') and the snaggletooth shark (''Hemipristis serra''). Their dietary preferences display an ontogenetic shift:{{rp, 65 Young megalodon commonly preyed on fish,{{Cite journal, last1=Pimiento, first1=Catalina, first2=Dana J., last2=Ehret, first3=Bruce J., last3=MacFadden , first4=Gordon, last4=Hubbell , title=Ancient Nursery Area for the Extinct Giant Shark Megalodon from the Miocene of Panama, journal=PLOS ONE, volume=5, issue=5, pages=e10552, year= 2010, pmid=20479893, pmc=2866656, doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0010552, editor1-last=Stepanova, editor1-first=Anna, bibcode = 2010PLoSO...510552P , doi-access=free sea turtles,{{cite journal, author1=Aguilera O. , author2=Augilera E. R. D. , title=Giant-toothed White Sharks and Wide-toothed Mako (Lamnidae) from the Venezuela Neogene: Their Role in the Caribbean, Shallow-water Fish Assemblage, journal=Caribbean Journal of Science, volume=40, issue=3, pages=362–368, year= 2004, url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228741311 dugongs,{{rp, 129 and small cetaceans; mature megalodon moved to off-shore areas and consumed large cetaceans.{{rp, 74–75 An exceptional case in the fossil record suggests that juvenile megalodon may have occasionally attacked much larger
balaenopterid Rorquals () are the largest group of baleen whales, which comprise the family Balaenopteridae, containing ten extant species in three genera. They include the largest animal that has ever lived, the blue whale, which can reach , and the fin whale ...
whales. Three tooth marks apparently from a {{convert, 4, to, 7, m, ft, adj=on, sp=us long Pliocene shark were found on a rib from an ancestral blue or humpback whale that showed evidence of subsequent healing, which is suspected to have been inflicted by a juvenile megalodon.{{cite journal, last=Godfrey , first=Stephen, year=2004, title=The Ecphora, journal=The Newsletter of Calvert Marine Museum Fossil Club, volume=19, number=1, pages=1–13, url=http://calvertmarinemuseum.com/cmmfc/newsletter/CMMFC_Newsletter_2004-04.pdf, url-status=dead , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101210010152/http://calvertmarinemuseum.com/cmmfc/newsletter/CMMFC_Newsletter_2004-04.pdf , archive-date=10 December 2010{{cite journal, last=Kallal, first=R. J., author2=Godfrey, S. J. , author3=Ortner, D. J. , title=Bone Reactions on a Pliocene Cetacean Rib Indicate Short-Term Survival of Predation Event, journal=International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, volume=22, issue=3, pages=253–260, date=27 August 2010, doi=10.1002/oa.1199


Extinction


Climate change

The Earth experienced a number of changes during the time period megalodon existed which affected marine life. A cooling trend starting in the Oligocene 35 Mya ultimately led to glaciation at the poles. Geological events changed currents and precipitation; among these were the closure of the
Central American Seaway The Central American Seaway (also known as the Panamanic Seaway, Inter-American Seaway and Proto-Caribbean Seaway) was a body of water that once separated North America from South America. It formed during the Jurassic (200–154 Ma) during the br ...
and changes in the Tethys Ocean, contributing to the cooling of the oceans. The stalling of the
Gulf Stream The Gulf Stream, together with its northern extension the North Atlantic Current, North Atlantic Drift, is a warm and swift Atlantic Ocean, Atlantic ocean current that originates in the Gulf of Mexico and flows through the Straits of Florida a ...
prevented nutrient-rich water from reaching major marine ecosystems, which may have negatively affected its food sources. The largest fluctuation of sea levels in the Cenozoic era occurred in the Plio-Pleistocene, between around 5 million to 12 thousand years ago, due to the expansion of glaciers at the poles, which negatively impacted coastal environments, and may have contributed to its extinction along with those of several other marine megafaunal species. These oceanographic changes, in particular the sea level drops, may have restricted many of the suitable shallow warm-water nursery sites for megalodon, hindering reproduction. Nursery areas are pivotal for the survival of many shark species, in part because they protect juveniles from predation.{{Cite news, last=Reilly, first=Michael, title=Prehistoric Shark Nursery Spawned Giants, publisher=Discovery News, date=29 September 2009, url=http://news.discovery.com/animals/megalodon-nursery-prehistoric-sharks.html, access-date=23 November 2013, archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120310015215/http://news.discovery.com/animals/megalodon-nursery-prehistoric-sharks.html , archive-date= 10 March 2012 As its range did not apparently extend into colder waters, megalodon may not have been able to retain a significant amount of metabolic heat, so its range was restricted to shrinking warmer waters.{{cite web, url=http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/evolution/megalodon_extinction.htm, title=The Extinction of Megalodon, publisher=Biology of Sharks and Rays, access-date=31 August 2017 Fossil evidence confirms the absence of megalodon in regions around the world where water temperatures had significantly declined during the Pliocene.{{rp, 77 However, an analysis of the distribution of megalodon over time suggests that temperature change did not play a direct role in its extinction. Its distribution during the Miocene and Pliocene did not correlate with warming and cooling trends; while abundance and distribution declined during the Pliocene, megalodon did show a capacity to inhabit colder latitudes. It was found in locations with a mean temperature ranging from {{convert, 12, to, 27, C, F, with a total range of {{convert, 1, to, 33, C, F, indicating that the global extent of suitable habitat should not have been greatly affected by the temperature changes that occurred. This is consistent with evidence that it was a mesotherm.


Changing ecosystem

Marine mammals attained their greatest diversity during the Miocene,{{rp, 71 such as with baleen whales with over 20 recognized Miocene genera in comparison to only six extant genera. Such diversity presented an ideal setting to support a super-predator such as megalodon.{{rp, 75 By the end of the Miocene, many species of mysticetes had gone extinct; surviving species may have been faster swimmers and thus more elusive prey.{{rp, 46 Furthermore, after the closure of the
Central American Seaway The Central American Seaway (also known as the Panamanic Seaway, Inter-American Seaway and Proto-Caribbean Seaway) was a body of water that once separated North America from South America. It formed during the Jurassic (200–154 Ma) during the br ...
, tropical whales decreased in diversity and abundance.{{Cite journal, last=Allmon, first=Warren D., author2=Steven D. Emslie , author3=Douglas S. Jones , author4=Gary S. Morgan , title=Late Neogene Oceanographic Change along Florida's West Coast: Evidence and Mechanisms, journal=The Journal of Geology, volume= 104, issue=2, pages= 143–162, year=2006, doi= 10.1086/629811, bibcode=1996JG....104..143A, s2cid=128418299 The extinction of megalodon correlates with the decline of many small mysticete lineages, and it is possible that it was quite dependent on them as a food source. Additionally, a marine megafauna extinction during the Pliocene was discovered to have eliminated 36% of all large marine species including 55% of marine mammals, 35% of seabirds, 9% of sharks, and 43% of sea turtles. The extinction was selective for endotherms and mesotherms relative to poikilotherms, implying causation by a decreased food supply{{cite journal, first1=C., last1=Pimiento, first2=J. N., last2=Griffin, first3=C. F., last3=Clements, first4=D., last4=Silvestro, first5=S., last5=Varela, first6=M. D., last6=Uhen, first7=C., last7=Jaramillo, year=2017, title=The Pleistocene Marine Megafauna Extinction and its Impact on Functional Diversity, journal=Nature Ecology and Evolution, volume=1, issue=8, pages=1100–1106, doi=10.1038/s41559-017-0223-6, pmid=29046566, s2cid=3639394, url=https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa34515 and thus consistent with megalodon being mesothermic. Megalodon may have been too large to sustain itself on the declining marine food resources. The cooling of the oceans during the Pliocene might have restricted the access of megalodon to the polar regions, depriving it of the large whales which had migrated there. Competition from large odontocetes, such as macropredatory sperm whales which appeared in the Miocene, and a member of genus ''Orcinus'' (i.e., ''
Orcinus citoniensis ''Orcinus citoniensis'' is an extinct species of killer whale identified in the Late Pliocene of Italy and the Early Pleistocene of England. It was smaller than the modern killer whale (''O. orca''), versus , and had around 8 more teeth in its ...
'') in the Pliocene, is assumed to have contributed to the decline and extinction of megalodon.{{rp, 46–47{{Cite journal, last1=McCormack, first1=Jeremy, last2=Griffiths, first2=Michael L., last3=Kim, first3=Sora L., last4=Shimada, first4=Kenshu, last5=Karnes, first5=Molly, last6=Maisch, first6=Harry, last7=Pederzani, first7=Sarah, last8=Bourgon , first8=Nicolas, last9=Jaouen, first9=Klervia, last10=Becker, first10=Martin A., last11=Jöns, first11=Niels, date=31 May 2022, title=Trophic position of Otodus megalodon and great white sharks through time revealed by zinc isotopes, journal=Nature Communications, language=en, volume=13, issue=1, pages=2980, doi=10.1038/s41467-022-30528-9, pmid=35641494, pmc=9156768 , bibcode=2022NatCo..13.2980M , s2cid=249235478, issn=2041-1723 But this assumption is disputed:{{cite journal, last1=Boessenecker, first1=R. W., last2=Ehret, first2=D. J., last3=Long, first3=D. J., last4= Churchill, first4= M., last5= Martin, first5= E., last6= Boessenecker, first6=S. J., title=The Early Pliocene extinction of the mega-toothed shark ''Otodus megalodon'': a view from the eastern North Pacific, journal= PeerJ, volume= 7, year= 2019, pages= e6088, doi= 10.7717/peerj.6088, pmid=30783558, pmc=6377595 The Orcininae emerged in Mid-Pliocene with ''O. citoniensis'' reported from the Pliocene of Italy,{{Cite journal, last1=Citron, first1=Sara, last2=Geisler, first2=Jonathan H., last3=Alberto, first3=Collareta, last4=Giovanni , first4=Bianucci, date=2022, title=Systematics, phylogeny and feeding behavior of the oldest killer whale: a reappraisal of Orcinus citoniensis (Capellini, 1883) from the Pliocene of Tuscany (Italy), journal=Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana, volume=61, issue=2, pages=167–186, doi=10.4435/BSPI.2022.13 and similar forms reported from the Pliocene of England and South Africa, indicating the capacity of these dolphins to cope with increasingly prevalent cold water temperatures in high latitudes. These dolphins were assumed to have been macrophagous in some studies, but on closer inspection, these dolphins are not found to be macrophagous and fed on small fishes instead. On the other hand, gigantic macropredatory sperm whales such as '' Livyatan''-like forms are last reported from Australia and South Africa circa 5 million years ago.{{Cite web, url=http://www.australasianscience.com.au/article/issue-april-2016/huge-tooth-reveals-prehistoric-moby-dick-melbourne.html, title=Huge Tooth Reveals Prehistoric Moby Dick in Melbourne, publisher=Australasian Science Magazine, access-date=24 April 2016{{cite web, date=21 April 2016, publisher=The Sydney Morning Herald, title=Move over Moby Dick: Meet Melbourne's own mega whale, url=https://www.smh.com.au/technology/move-over-moby-dick-meet-melbournes-own-mega-whale-20160421-gobhl6.html{{Cite journal, last=Govender, first=R, title=Early Pliocene fossil cetaceans from Hondeklip Bay, Namaqualand, South Africa, journal=Historical Biology, year=2021, volume=33, issue=4, pages=574–593, doi=10.1080/08912963.2019.1650273, s2cid=202019648 Others, such as ''
Hoplocetus ''Hoplocetus'' is an extinct genus of raptorial cetacean of the sperm whale superfamily (biology), superfamily, Physeteroidea. Its remains have been found in the Miocene of Belgium, France, Germany and Malta, the Pliocene of Belgium and France, a ...
'' and '' Scaldicetus'' also occupied a niche similar to that of modern killer whales but the last of these forms disappeared during the Pliocene.{{cite journal, last1= Hampe, first1= O., title= Middle/late Miocene hoplocetine sperm whale remains (Odontoceti: Physeteridae) of North Germany with an emended classification of the Hoplocetinae, journal= Fossil Record, volume= 9, issue= 1, year= 2006, pages= 61–86, doi= 10.1002/mmng.200600002, doi-access= free Members of genus ''Orcinus'' became large and macrophagous in the Pleistocene. Paleontologist Robert Boessenecker and his colleagues rechecked the fossil record of megalodon for carbon dating errors and concluded that it disappeared circa 3.5 million years ago. Boessenecker and his colleagues further suggest that megalodon suffered range fragmentation due to climatic shifts, and competition with white sharks might have contributed to its decline and extinction. Competition with white sharks is assumed to be a factor in other studies as well,{{Cite journal, last1=Antunes, first1=Miguel Telles, first2=Ausenda Cáceres, last2=Balbino, title=The Great White Shark ''Carcharodon carcharias'' (Linne, 1758) in the Pliocene of Portugal and its Early Distribution in Eastern Atlantic, journal=Revista Española de Paleontología, volume=25, issue=1, pages=1–6, year=2010, url=http://recyt.fecyt.es/index.php/REP/article/viewFile/11488/7741 but this hypothesis warrants further testing.{{cite journal, last1=Kast, first1=Emma R., last2=Griffiths, first2=Michael L., last3=Kim, first3=Sora. L., last4=Rao, first4=Zixuan C., last5=Shimada, first5=Kensu, last6=Becker, first6=Martin A., last7=Maisch, first7=Harry M., last8=Eagle, first8=Robert A., last9=Clarke, first9=Chelesia A., last10=Neumann, first10=Allison N., last11=Karnes, first11=Molly E., last12=Lüdecke, first12=Tina, last13=Leichliter, first13=Jennifer N., last14=Martínez-García, first14=Alfredo, last15=Akhtar, first15=Alliya A., last16=Wang, first16=Xingchen T., last17=Haug, first17=Gerald H., last18=Sigman, first18=Daniel M., date=22 June 2022, title=Cenozoic megatooth sharks occupied extremely high trophic positions, journal=Science Advances, volume=8, issue=25, pages=eabl6529 , doi=10.1126/sciadv.abl6529, pmid=35731884 , pmc=9217088 , bibcode=2022SciA....8L6529K Multiple compounding environmental and ecological factors including climate change and thermal limitations, collapse of prey populations and resource competition with white sharks are believed to have contributed to decline and extinction of megalodon for now. The extinction of megalodon set the stage for further changes in marine communities. The average body size of baleen whales increased significantly after its disappearance, although possibly due to other, climate-related, causes.{{cite journal, last1= Slater, first1=G. J., last2= Goldbogen, first2=J. A., last3= Pyenson, first3=N. D., title= Independent evolution of baleen whale gigantism linked to Plio-Pleistocene ocean dynamics, journal= Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, volume= 284, issue= 1855, year= 2017, page= 20170546, doi= 10.1098/rspb.2017.0546, pmc=5454272, pmid=28539520 Conversely the increase in baleen whale size may have contributed to the extinction of megalodon, as they may have preferred to go after smaller whales; bite marks on large whale species may have come from scavenging sharks. Megalodon may have simply become
coextinct Coextinction and cothreatened refer to the phenomena of the loss or decline of a host species resulting in the loss or endangerment of an other species that depends on it, potentially leading to cascading effects across trophic levels. The term or ...
with smaller whale species, such as '' Piscobalaena nana''.{{cite journal, first1=A., last1=Collareta, first2=O., last2=Lambert, first3=W., last3=Landini, first4=G., last4=Bianucci, year=2017, title=Did the giant extinct shark ''Carcharocles megalodon'' target small prey? Bite marks on marine mammal remains from the late Miocene of Peru, journal=Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, volume=469, pages=84–91, doi=10.1016/j.palaeo.2017.01.001, bibcode=2017PPP...469...84C, hdl=10281/151854 The extinction of megalodon had a positive impact on other apex predators of the time, such as the great white shark, in some cases spreading to regions where megalodon became absent.{{Cite journal, last=Sylvain, first= Adnet, author2=A. C. Balbino , author3=M. T. Antunes, author4=J. M. Marín-Ferrer, title=New fossil teeth of the White Shark (''Carcharodon carcharias'') from the Early Pliocene of Spain. Implication for its paleoecology in the Mediterranean , journal=Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, volume= 256, issue=1, pages= 7–16, year=2010, doi= 10.1127/0077-7749/2009/0029


In popular culture

Megalodon has been portrayed in many works of fiction, including films and novels, and continues to be a popular subject for fiction involving sea monsters.{{cite book, url={{google books, plainurl=yes, id=PHbeCwAAQBAJ, page=107, first=J. A., last=Weinstock, year=2014, title=The Ashgate Encyclopedia of Literary and Cinematic Monsters, publisher= Routledge, pages=107–108, location=Farnham, United Kingdom, isbn=978-1-4094-2562-5, oclc=874390267 Reports of supposedly fresh megalodon teeth, such as those found by {{HMS, Challenger, 1858, 6 in 1873 which were dated in 1959 by the zoologist Wladimir Tschernezky to be around 11,000 to 24,000 years old, helped popularise claims of recent megalodon survival amongst cryptozoologists.{{Cite journal , last=Guimont , first=Edward , date=2021-10-05 , title=The Megalodon: A Monster of the New Mythology , url=https://journal.media-culture.org.au/index.php/mcjournal/article/view/2793 , journal=M/C Journal , language=en , volume=24 , issue=5 , doi=10.5204/mcj.2793 , s2cid=241813307 , issn=1441-2616 These claims are now discredited, and are probably teeth that were well-preserved by a thick mineral-crust precipitate of
manganese dioxide Manganese dioxide is the inorganic compound with the formula . This blackish or brown solid occurs naturally as the mineral pyrolusite, which is the main ore of manganese and a component of manganese nodules. The principal use for is for dry-cell ...
, and so had a lower decomposition rate and retained a white color during fossilization. Fossil megalodon teeth can vary in color from off-white to dark browns and greys, and some fossil teeth may have been redeposited into a younger
stratum In geology and related fields, a stratum ( : strata) is a layer of rock or sediment characterized by certain lithologic properties or attributes that distinguish it from adjacent layers from which it is separated by visible surfaces known as ei ...
. The claims that megalodon could remain elusive in the depths, similar to the megamouth shark which was discovered in 1976, are unlikely as the shark lived in warm coastal waters and probably could not survive in the cold and nutrient-poor deep sea environment. Contemporary fiction about megalodon surviving into modern times was pioneered by the 1997 novel '' Meg: A Novel of Deep Terror'' by
Steve Alten Steven Robert Alten (born August 21, 1959, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American science-fiction author. He is best known for his ''Meg'' series of novels set around the fictitious survival of the megalodon, a giant, prehistoric shark. Bio ...
and its subsequent sequels. Megalodon subsequently began to feature in films, such as the 2003 direct to video '' Shark Attack 3: Megalodon'', and later '' The Meg,'' a 2018 film based on the 1997 book which grossed over $500 million at the box office. Animal Planet's pseudo-documentary '' Mermaids: The Body Found'' included an encounter 1.6 mya between a pod of mermaids and a megalodon. Later, in August 2013, the
Discovery Channel Discovery Channel (known as The Discovery Channel from 1985 to 1995, and often referred to as simply Discovery) is an American cable channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery, a publicly traded company run by CEO David Zaslav. , Discovery Channe ...
opened its annual Shark Week series with another film for television, '' Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives'', a controversial docufiction about the creature that presented alleged evidence in order to suggest that megalodon was still alive. This program received criticism for being completely fictional and for inadequately disclosing its fictional nature; for example, all of the supposed scientists depicted were paid actors, and there was no disclosure in the documentary itself that it was fictional. In a poll by Discovery, 73% of the viewers of the documentary thought that megalodon was not extinct. In 2014, Discovery re-aired ''The Monster Shark Lives'', along with a new one-hour program, ''Megalodon: The New Evidence'', and an additional fictionalized program entitled ''Shark of Darkness: Wrath of Submarine'', resulting in further backlash from media sources and the scientific community.{{cite news, url=http://op-talk.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/08/15/sorry-fans-discovery-has-jumped-the-shark-week, first=J., last=Flanagin, year=2014, title=Sorry, Fans. Discovery Has Jumped the Shark Week. , newspaper=New York Times, access-date=16 August 2014 Despite the criticism from scientists, ''Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives'' was a huge ratings success, gaining 4.8 million viewers, the most for any Shark Week episode up to that point. Megalodon teeth are the
state fossil Most American states have made a state fossil designation, in many cases during the 1980s. It is common to designate one species in which fossilization has occurred, rather than a single specimen, or a category of fossils not limited to a single ...
of North Carolina.{{Cite web, url=https://ncpedia.org/fossil-fossilized-teeth-megalodon, title=Fossil, Fossilized Teeth of the Megalodon Shark {{! NCpedia, website=ncpedia.org, access-date=17 October 2019


See also

{{Outline, Outline of sharks {{Portal, Sharks * List of prehistoric cartilaginous fish * Prehistoric fish *
Largest prehistoric organisms The largest prehistoric animals include both vertebrate and invertebrate species. Many of them are described below, along with their typical range of size (for the general dates of extinction, see the link to each). Many species mentioned might ...
{{clear


Notes

{{Reflist , group = note


References

{{Reflist


Further reading

* {{cite journal , last1=Dickson , first1=K. A. , last2=Graham , first2=J. B. , date=November–December 2004 , title=Evolution and consequences of endothermy in fishes , journal=Physiological and Biochemical Zoology , pmid=15674772 , volume=77 , issue=6 , pages=998–1018 , doi=10.1086/423743, s2cid=40104003 * {{cite book , first=Bretton W. , last=Kent , year=1994 , title=Fossil Sharks of the Chesapeake Bay Region , location=Columbia, Md. , publisher=Egan Rees & Boyer , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7cFJAQAAMAAJ , isbn=978-1-881620-01-3 , oclc=918266672


External links

{{Commons category, Otodus megalodon {{Wikispecies, Otodus (Megaselachus) megalodon, Megalodon
The rise of super predatory sharks


;Paleontological videos * {{YouTube, TUyWbW3yKFI, Paleontologist Mark Renz shows one of the largest megalodon teeth discovered * {{YouTube, 5N3EjR7_vks, Shark Week Special on megalodon with Pat McCarthy and John Babiarz with comments on its extinction. * {{YouTube, ciUDkIdptw0, Megalodon fossil teeth show evidence of 10-million-year-old shark nursery * {{YouTube, 85clp1k_sms, Expert view: information about megalodon (featuring expert Dana Ehret) * {{YouTube, e4p9EWuVxYQ, Lamniform sharks: 110 million years of ocean supremacy (featuring expert Mikael Siverson) * {{YouTube, suC2vQQz1Ak, The Rise and Fall of the Neogene Giant Sharks (featuring expert Bretton Kent) *{{cite web , first=Kallie , last=Moore , work=
PBS Eons PBS Digital Studios is a non-profit organization that through which PBS distributes original educational web video content based in Arlington, Virginia. It comprises both original series and partnerships with existing YouTube channels. Most of t ...
, date=19 December 2018 , title=Why Megalodon (Definitely) Went Extinct , url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTPcq2HczVY , archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211114/BTPcq2HczVY, archive-date=14 November 2021 , url-status=live, via= YouTube {{cbignore {{Shark nav {{Portal bar, Paleontology, Sharks, Marine life {{Taxonbar , from=Q163873 Carcharocles Miocene sharks Pliocene sharks Miocene first appearances Piacenzian extinctions Pisco Formation Fossil taxa described in 1843 Taxa named by Louis Agassiz Symbols of North Carolina Apex predators