Skip to content

What happens to sea life during hurricanes? Can they move to calmer waters? A marine scientist explains

Some marine animals will escape by going farther out to sea; however, others could perish along the beaches, says Mark Patterson, a professor at Northeastern’s Marine Science Center.

Fish washed ashore near a waterfront with a dock in the background.
A dead snook lies along the water’s edge in Bradenton Beach, Florida, after Hurricane MIchael in 2018. The hurricane failed to break up a toxic algae bloom off shore. AP Photo/Chris O’Meara

When hurricanes roar in, expect sharks to head out to sea, corals to shatter, and grouper and other reef fish to end up dead on shorelines.

Hurricane Milton was making its way across the Gulf of Mexico Wednesday and expected to make landfall in the Tampa Bay area on the west coast of Florida.

A big storm like Milton can be expected to churn the water 60 to 80 feet below the sea’s surface, says Mark Patterson, a professor at Northeastern’s Marine Science Center.

Some marine animals will be able to escape by going farther out to sea, he says.

The approaching megastorm may have already sent blacktip and hammerhead sharks that frequent Florida’s west coast swimming to calmer waters. 

“A lot of fish do sense a disturbance like this and go to deeper water,” Patterson says.

That’s especially true for sharks, which do not have swim bladders that cause fish like snappers and groupers to maintain neutral buoyancy in water and hinder their escape, he says.

Sharks may also have a special sense that gives them a heads-up when a storm is on the way, says Shark Angels, a shark conservation organization.

“There’s a growing body of research that suggests sharks can actually feel changes in barometric pressure — either through their inner ear or something called a lateral line,” the organization says. 

Whales also have the ability to move quickly to calmer waters and “are not overly affected by hurricanes,” says the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

But bony fish with swim bladders take longer, hours or days, “to boogie out of the way,” Patterson says.

A hurricane like Milton can hurl reef fish like grouper and snapper 50 feet up from the  depths and cause them to experience barotrauma, which is when their swim bladders expand on their ascent to the surface, leaving them too buoyant to descend again. 

“They can end up on the beach” or swirling debris near the shoreline, Patterson says.

Sharks don’t regulate their buoyancy that way, he says.

But not all sharks choose to dodge big storms.

Tiger sharks, a large and robust species, remained in the shallow waters off the Bahamas despite a direct hit from Hurricane Matthew in 2016, and “nearly doubled in numbers shortly after the storm,” Shark Angels says.

“Tiger sharks aren’t picky eaters, so scientists suspect they were scavenging on dead animals left behind by the storm,” the organization says.

There have been plenty of hoaxed videos of sharks swimming in streets after storms, but the video of a finned animal swimming in a Fort Myers backyard after Hurricane Ian in 2022 was determined to be the real thing.

Experts just couldn’t figure out what kind of fish it was, although a young bull shark was one guess, according to the AP.

Northeastern Global News, in your inbox.

Sign up for NGN’s daily newsletter for news, discovery and analysis from around the world.