<p>The largest sharks ever to have roamed the oceans parked their young in shallow, warm-water nurseries where food was abundant and predators scarce until they could assume their title as kings and queens of the sea.</p>.<p>But as sea levels declined in a cooling world, the brutal mega-predator, Otodus megalodons, may have found fewer and fewer safe-haven coastal zones where its young could safely reach adulthood, researchers reported Wednesday in The Royal Society journal Biology Letters.</p>.<p>Indeed, the reliance of Megalodon on nurseries may have contributed to the end of their 20-million-year reign, according to the research.</p>.<p>Otodus megalodon -- sometimes classified as a Carcharocles megalodon -- took 25 years to become an adult -- "an extremely delayed sexual maturity", the authors said in the research paper.</p>.<p>But once it was fully grown, the shark could reach up to 18 metres, three times the size of the largest great white shark, made famous by the 1975 hit-movie Jaws.</p>.<p>As an apex predator, and up until its extinction around three million years ago, the adult megalodon had no rivals among other ocean hunters and feasted on smaller sharks and even whales.</p>.<p>But its young were vulnerable to attacks by other predators, often other razor-toothed sharks.</p>.<p>Nurseries on shallow continental shelves with extensive smaller fish for food and few competing predators gave them the ideal space to reach their awesome size.</p>.<p>"Our results reveal, for the first time, that nursery areas were commonly used by the O. megalodon over large temporal and spatial scales," said the authors.</p>.<p>The research team discovered a nursery zone off the eastern coast of Spain in Tarragona Province after visiting a museum and observing a collection of megalodon teeth.</p>.<p>"Many of them were quite small for such a large animal," the authors from British University of Bristol, Carlos Martinez-Perez and Humberto Ferron, told AFP.</p>.<p>Judging by the size of the teeth, they surmised the area had once been home to young megalodons.</p>.<p>The Spanish nursery could be described as "a perfect place to grow", the authors said.</p>.<p>It would have been a "shallow bay area of warm waters, connected to the sea and with extensive coral reefs and plenty of invertebrates, fish species, marine mammals and other sharks and rays".</p>.<p>The researchers analysed eight other sets of shark teeth which had previously been gathered, spread across the United States, Peru, Panama and Chile.</p>.<p>They came to the conclusion in four of them -- two in the United States and two in Panama -- had belonged to younger sharks.</p>.<p>As a result, the authors suggest these four areas where the teeth were found might also have been nurseries.</p>.<p>"The remaining four formations ... demonstrate size-class structures typical of populations dominated by adults, suggesting these regions might correspond to feeding or mating areas," the study said.</p>.<p>Sharks continuously shed their teeth throughout their lifetime, and nurseries are zones with a high abundance of sharks.</p>.<p>"As a consequence, huge numbers of teeth can be shed, increasing the chances of subsequent fossil discoveries," the authors said.</p>.<p>Megalodons enjoyed the warm and temperate waters of the Miocene period which extended from about five million to 23 million years ago.</p>.<p>But the cooler Pliocene period suited them far less.</p>.<p>As their prey adapted and headed towards colder waters, the megalodon stayed where the oceans remained warm.</p>.<p>The remaining food was also favoured by great white sharks, increasing competition with the smaller, but more agile, predator.</p>.<p>The vast reduction of shallow water nurseries due to sea-level losses -- caused by a cooler climate -- may also have contributed to the megalodon's eventual extinction.</p>
<p>The largest sharks ever to have roamed the oceans parked their young in shallow, warm-water nurseries where food was abundant and predators scarce until they could assume their title as kings and queens of the sea.</p>.<p>But as sea levels declined in a cooling world, the brutal mega-predator, Otodus megalodons, may have found fewer and fewer safe-haven coastal zones where its young could safely reach adulthood, researchers reported Wednesday in The Royal Society journal Biology Letters.</p>.<p>Indeed, the reliance of Megalodon on nurseries may have contributed to the end of their 20-million-year reign, according to the research.</p>.<p>Otodus megalodon -- sometimes classified as a Carcharocles megalodon -- took 25 years to become an adult -- "an extremely delayed sexual maturity", the authors said in the research paper.</p>.<p>But once it was fully grown, the shark could reach up to 18 metres, three times the size of the largest great white shark, made famous by the 1975 hit-movie Jaws.</p>.<p>As an apex predator, and up until its extinction around three million years ago, the adult megalodon had no rivals among other ocean hunters and feasted on smaller sharks and even whales.</p>.<p>But its young were vulnerable to attacks by other predators, often other razor-toothed sharks.</p>.<p>Nurseries on shallow continental shelves with extensive smaller fish for food and few competing predators gave them the ideal space to reach their awesome size.</p>.<p>"Our results reveal, for the first time, that nursery areas were commonly used by the O. megalodon over large temporal and spatial scales," said the authors.</p>.<p>The research team discovered a nursery zone off the eastern coast of Spain in Tarragona Province after visiting a museum and observing a collection of megalodon teeth.</p>.<p>"Many of them were quite small for such a large animal," the authors from British University of Bristol, Carlos Martinez-Perez and Humberto Ferron, told AFP.</p>.<p>Judging by the size of the teeth, they surmised the area had once been home to young megalodons.</p>.<p>The Spanish nursery could be described as "a perfect place to grow", the authors said.</p>.<p>It would have been a "shallow bay area of warm waters, connected to the sea and with extensive coral reefs and plenty of invertebrates, fish species, marine mammals and other sharks and rays".</p>.<p>The researchers analysed eight other sets of shark teeth which had previously been gathered, spread across the United States, Peru, Panama and Chile.</p>.<p>They came to the conclusion in four of them -- two in the United States and two in Panama -- had belonged to younger sharks.</p>.<p>As a result, the authors suggest these four areas where the teeth were found might also have been nurseries.</p>.<p>"The remaining four formations ... demonstrate size-class structures typical of populations dominated by adults, suggesting these regions might correspond to feeding or mating areas," the study said.</p>.<p>Sharks continuously shed their teeth throughout their lifetime, and nurseries are zones with a high abundance of sharks.</p>.<p>"As a consequence, huge numbers of teeth can be shed, increasing the chances of subsequent fossil discoveries," the authors said.</p>.<p>Megalodons enjoyed the warm and temperate waters of the Miocene period which extended from about five million to 23 million years ago.</p>.<p>But the cooler Pliocene period suited them far less.</p>.<p>As their prey adapted and headed towards colder waters, the megalodon stayed where the oceans remained warm.</p>.<p>The remaining food was also favoured by great white sharks, increasing competition with the smaller, but more agile, predator.</p>.<p>The vast reduction of shallow water nurseries due to sea-level losses -- caused by a cooler climate -- may also have contributed to the megalodon's eventual extinction.</p>