Video reveals baby steps of newly hatched ‘walking’ sharks

This unique strategy may help the sharks survive strandings in tide pools.

I'm walkin' here! An epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) at the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland, Australia.
I'm walkin' here! An epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) at the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland, Australia.
(Image credit: Nigel Marsh/Getty Images)

Some sharks can "walk," and researchers recently discovered how one of these unusual shark species practice taking baby steps. They begin when they're newly hatched, and a hatchling's walk is no different from that of older juveniles.

When the tide near a coral reef goes out, a small species of carpet shark is often left behind. When stranded in shallow tide pools with dwindling oxygen levels and rising temperatures — or worse, beached on hot slabs of exposed reef — most aquatic species wouldn't stand a chance. But the epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) can hold its breath for hours and tolerate a range of temperatures. And in a pinch, it can walk. 

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Joshua A. Krisch
Live Science Contributor

Joshua A. Krisch is a freelance science writer. He is particularly interested in biology and biomedical sciences, but he has covered technology, environmental issues, space, mathematics, and health policy, and he is interested in anything that could plausibly be defined as science. Joshua studied biology at Yeshiva University, and later completed graduate work in health sciences at Cornell University and science journalism at New York University.