Showing posts with label Alenuihaha Channel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alenuihaha Channel. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2009

What's a CookieCutter Shark?

We applauded the courage of Mike Spalding and his fast-acting support crew when he was attacked by a cookiecutter shark 11 miles into his Alenuihaha Channel crossing.




Several readers have asked about the cookiecutter shark (Isistius brasiliensis), previously known as Cigar Sharks (see photo of alien-looking creature). Susan Scott of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin wrote an educational article on this unusual shark:

When a suspected cookiecutter shark bit Maui long-distance swimmer Mike Spalding on the leg last week, it was the first evidence of that species attacking a living person.

That surprised me because these little sharks bite just about everything that swims. Tunas, mahimahi, billfish, dolphins, monk seals, dugongs, humpback whales, sharks, rays and others occasionally bear the scars of cookiecutter shark bites. One even took a bite out of a rubber part on a submarine.

In all these cases it's a pretty sure bet who did the biting because the cookiecutter shark leaves a signature as distinct as the Z of Zorro. The bite is the size and shape of an Oreo cookie.


Cookiecutters are tiny for sharks, growing only 20 inches long. They swim in tropical waters around the world but almost never connect with people because they spend their days in the deep ocean, sometimes more than two miles down. They come to the surface to feed, but only at night.

Mike was 11 miles offshore, at night, when he was bitten.

The cookiecutter is well suited to cut round chunks of flesh from its prey. The shark has protruding jaws and big suctorial lips, a term biologists use to mean they suck. When a prey gets close, the shark strikes by digging its needlelike upper teeth into the skin. Hanging on with its suction-cup lips, the shark then rotates its body in a circle, using its lower saw-shaped teeth to cut out a plug of flesh.

No one knows how long this cutting takes, but if it takes a while the shark can breathe while the mouth bites. Two respiratory holes called spiracles lie behind the eyes, allowing water to flow into the head and over the gills, exiting through slits on each side. Such gill slits are unique to sharks and their kin, the skates and rays.


To test the theory that cookiecutter sharks made the scars commonly seen on tunas, in 1971 a Hawaii biologist made his own cookie cutter from the jaws of a dead cookiecutter shark. The shape and size of his cuts were identical to the ones on the tunas.

The question that remained, however, was how these small, tubular fish (once called cigar fish) with puny fins get so close to fast-swimming animals, most of which are formidable predators themselves.

They turn on the lights. Bioluminescent organs that make green light cover the underside of the cookiecutter shark. (The shark's scientific name, Isistius, comes from Isis, the Egyptian goddess of light.) The theory is that large predators see the light and swim to it for a snack. But when they get close, they become the snack. Since these bites don't usually kill, cookiecutter sharks are considered parasites.

The cookiecutter scars I've seen on marine animals were smaller than the 3-inch-diameter, 1-inch-deep wound on Spalding's leg. His cut might be bigger because humans are soft, our skin stretches and wounds gape. It's possible something else did the biting, but circumstantial evidence points strongly to a cookiecutter shark.

Mike's swim made the record books, but certainly not in the way he intended. This ocean man, however, isn't going to let a rascally little shark spoil his quest. When his leg heals, he told reporters, he's going to try again to swim the Alenuihaha Channel.

May this time the goddess Isis not be with him.


Upper two photos by the Maui News. Third photo from top is from the ReefQuest Center for Shark Research. Fourth photo from top is from the Australian Museum.

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Mike Spalding - One Tough Cookie

Courtesy of WOWSA, Huntington Beach, California.

To the best of our knowledge, Maui resident Mike Spalding was the first channel swimmer in recent memory to have been attacked by a shark, although many swimmers from Catalina Island to the Caribbean have been approached by sharks on their solo efforts.



Spalding, a well-known ocean swimmer from Hawaii, had to halt his 30-mile Alenuihaha Channel crossing from the Big Island of Hawaii to the island of Maui about 4.5 hours and 11 miles into his swim.

What is even more scary about the attack is that Mike was hit at 8:00 pm. 15 seconds after feeling a sharp pain on his chest, Mike received a 3″ diameter, 1″ deep wound on the back of his left leg, reportedly caused by a cookie cutter shark (see photo of alien-looking creature).

Spalding had recently been inducted into the Hawaii Swimming Hall of Fame for his seven channel swims between Hawaiian Islands. His attempt of the Alenuihaha Channel was his more difficult one - between the northern tip of the Big Island and the southeast shore of Maui.

True to his nature and less than a day after Australian Penny Palfrey completed her attempt of the Alenuihaha Channel, Spalding immediately knew the consequences of the attack. "I got hit in the calf. It was such a disappointment because I knew the swim was over. I was bleeding profusely."

According to the Maui News, Spalding yelled in pain, quickly swimming over to his escort kayak in the pitch darkness. "I didn't see [the shark]. All I felt was the bite, and I got the hell out of the water as quick as I could." As his escort paddler Buddy McLean helped him get into the kayak, the kayak began to quickly fill with blood. Buddy used a VHF radio to call a nearby support boat for help. The boat and its crew picked up the men and tried to stop the bleeding. Pressure with a towel and an antibiotic were applied to the wound which was covered with gauze and secured with duct tape.

"It was pretty crazy. He got hit twice," said his paddler. "I couldn't see anything in the water, but [I knew] Spalding was in serious trouble because of the way he yelled."

Here is one loud shout out to Spalding's courage and recovery and his support team's fast actions.

Photos by the Maui News.

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association