“…The hypothesis of accidental collisions between swordfish and sharks during feeding activity on the same prey school (Fierstine et al ., 1997; Penadés-Suay et al ., 2017), already proposed by some authors to also explain turtles' impalement (Frazier et al ., 1994), can be excluded for the contemporary finding of two swordfish bills impaled in the same shark. Moreover, both attacks were directed to the shark cranial zone, as in all the other cases reported in the literature (Vacchi et al ., 2000; Penadés-Suay et al ., 2017, 2019) (Appendix 1);- Predator–prey relationship : data available in the literature show evidence of predation on juvenile swordfish by blue sharks (Vaske-Júnior et al ., 2009; Lopez et al ., 2010; Markaida & Sosa-Nishizaki, 2010). All records of impalement reported in Appendix 1 can be referred to an interaction between a juvenile swordfish (two in our study case) and a large shark (236–300 cm TL for P. glauca , 400 cm TL for A. superciliosus ).
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