The pups are back
June Casagrande
Just when you thought it was safe to go back in Newport Harbor, here
comes Chompy, or perhaps Twinkie or even Jawronimo.
It’s shark pup season in the bay and the Back Bay Science Center
has found a fun way to celebrate that helps school kids learn the
value of the fragile local habitat: a shark-naming contest.
Students in Orange County schools have been submitting their
suggestions for a couple of weeks. On Saturday, contestants can get
some inspiration from the little fish themselves. From 9 to 11 a.m.,
the public can come to the Back Bay Science Center to view five to 10
shark “pups,” as the babies are called, before casting their votes
for names.
“These sharks are all either gray smoothhound sharks or leopard
sharks born right here in the bay,” explained John Scholl, biologist
for the Back Bay Science Center. “They’re caught in the bay and then
they’ll be returned to the bay after the contest.”
The two species of sharks that call the Back Bay their home are
small sharks not a threat to humans, Scholl said. Another interesting
fact is that, even though the sharks are fish, they’re born live like
mammals. That’s because the eggs hatch inside the mother.
Competition to name the baby sharks is sure to be stiff. In the
first two weeks of the contest, 150 children had already submitted
some pretty creative names: Bloomy, Bruca, Twinkie, Jawronimo, Grady,
Larvin, Chompy and Spike are a few of the monikers that could soon
grace one of the sharks swimming in local waters.
The sharks won’t be tagged, so the winners will never know which
sharks out there bear their names. They’ll just know that out there,
somewhere, little sharks swim in their honor.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.