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Newest White Shark at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. There is a third white shark that just arrived at the Monterey Bay Aquairum.
White Sharks historically can not stay in captivity very long, so be sure to visit soon. Photograph Courtesy Monterey Bay Aquarium. All Rights Reserved.

For Just the 3rd Time, a Young White Shark Goes on Exhibit at Monterey Bay Aquarium
08/28/2007
Earlier successes raised awareness of threat to sharks, added to information about shark migrations

For the third time since 2004, the Monterey Bay Aquarium has placed a young white shark on public exhibit, bringing him to Monterey on Tuesday evening (August 28) – 24 days after the shark was caught accidentally in commercial fishing gear off Southern California.

As with the two prior animals – white sharks that were kept at the aquarium for 198 days (in 2004-05) and for 137 days (in 2006-07) before they were returned to the wild – the aquarium hopes to keep him on exhibit for several months as a way to change public attitudes and promote greater protection for these magnificent and much-maligned ocean predators.

The young shark, a 4-foot, 9-inch male weighing 67 1/2 pounds, was brought north Tuesday in a 3,000-gallon mobile life support transport truck. Caught three miles off Ventura by a sea bass fisherman, he had been held since August 4 in a 4-million-gallon ocean pen off Malibu. He was feeding and navigating the waters of the pen before he was brought to Monterey.

Through its White Shark Research Project, the aquarium has worked since 2002 to learn more about white sharks in the wild and to bring a white shark to Monterey for exhibit. During that time, aquarium staff have tagged and tracked 10 juvenile white sharks off Southern California – animals they either collected or that were obtained from commercial fishing crews who caught them accidentally. Both sharks kept at the aquarium were tagged and tracked after their release.

The first shark, a female brought to the aquarium in September 2004, was “the most powerful emissary for ocean conservation in our history,” said aquarium Executive Director Julie Packard. The shark was part of the aquarium’s Outer Bay exhibit for six and a half months and was seen by more than a million people between September 15, 2004 and March 30, 2005. In follow-up surveys, many visitors reported coming away with a deeper appreciation of the need to protect white sharks and their ocean homes.

More than 600,000 people saw the second white shark between September 1, 2006 and January 16, 2007, when he was returned to the wild.

The nonprofit aquarium has contributed more than $1 million since 2002 to field studies of juvenile and adult white sharks, in addition to its efforts to exhibit white sharks.

In the fall of 2006 alone, scientists with the Tagging of Pacific Predators (TOPP), supported in part by the aquarium, placed 41 electronic tags on adult white sharks off the Farallon Islands and Point Año Nuevo. TOPP researchers have now tagged 101 adult white sharks off the Central Coast.

The recently published tagging studies are demonstrating that adult white sharks show a high degree of fidelity to the region. Genetic studies on DNA samples taken from the sharks when they’re tagged are also underway, and will help to discern the connections between Central Coast sharks and other white sharks in the western Pacific and Atlantic oceans.

Data from the tags are offering new insights into the far-ranging travels of white sharks in the eastern Pacific, according to Dr. Barbara Block of Stanford University, a marine biologist and principal investigator with TOPP. Tag data and published research can be found at www.topp.org.

The aquarium continues to collaborate with the TOPP team and other researchers to tag young white sharks in southern California waters, and to collect DNA samples for analysis of the population structure of white sharks in California and Mexico. Data from seven of the 10 young white sharks tagged since the field project began in 2002 have been published in the scientific press, documenting the sharks’ use of nearshore waters in California and Mexico as “white shark nurseries.”

Aside from the two animals that thrived during their stays in Monterey, no aquarium in the world has exhibited a white shark for more than 16 days.


The second shark at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. There is a new white shark that just arrived at the Monterey Bay Aquairum.
Photograph October 2005 by SFBAYIMAGES.com. All Rights Reserved.

In the Monterey Bay Aquarium project, collecting white sharks has been the subject of a focused multi-year effort involving aquarium staff, scientists and fishermen, said aquarium husbandry curator Christina Slager. This approach, developed in consultation with a panel of independent shark experts, is designed to minimize the stresses of collection, holding and transport, she said.

Before bringing a white shark to Monterey, members of the aquarium’s field team monitor its behavior to see if it has adjusted to swimming in an enclosed space. The team offers salmon, mackerel and other fish, and confirms that the shark is feeding before an attempt is made to bring it to Monterey.

The aquarium’s 1.2-million-gallon Outer Bay exhibit was designed for pelagic (open ocean)animals like white sharks. It is home to Galapagos and scalloped hammerhead sharks, as well as large bluefin and yellowfin tuna, barracuda, sea turtles, ocean sunfish and other species.

With the first two white sharks, visitors saw the animals face-to-face, and learned about shark conservation issues in conversations with staff and volunteer guides; through an auditorium program devoted to the white shark project; and through exhibit graphics that specifically address the threats facing white sharks. Similar programs are in place for the new arrival.

“I can’t overstate the impact of this single animal on advancing our mission to inspire conservation of the oceans,” Packard said of the first white shark the aquarium had on exhibit.

The aquarium is open daily through Labor Day from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and on Saturdays and Sundays from 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. (through September 2). Starting September 4, regular aquarium hours are from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.

Web visitors can see the shark online via the aquarium’s streaming Outer Bay web cam from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily (Pacific time).

White sharks are in decline worldwide, in part because they’re slow to reproduce and because of growing fishing pressure that is decimating all shark species. Their fearsome reputation has also made them a target of trophy hunters and the curio trade.

White sharks are protected in California and other U.S. waters, as well as in South Africa, Australia, Mexico and several other nations. In October 2004, white sharks were granted additional protection by the 166 nations that are parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna (CITES).

The aquarium encourages public involvement in shark conservation through its “Seafood Watch” program, which distributes consumer pocket guides to sustainable seafood. The guides, as well as supporting materials for restaurateurs and seafood retailers, highlight “best choices” fisheries, including those that kill fewer animals – including sharks – that aren’t the direct target of the fisheries. Details are online at www.seafoodwatch.org.

People who want to take a more active role can join the aquarium’s Ocean Action Team, and get action alerts about shark issues and other ocean conservation topics. To join, visit www.oceanaction.org.

Through its Center for the Future of the Oceans, the aquarium works with other institutions and agencies to develop the best strategies for white shark conservation policy in California waters. It is also part of a coalition working to establish a network of marine protected areas, including fully protected marine reserves where fishing is not allowed, along the entire California coast. Details are available at www.oceanaction.org.

Great White Shark, Farallon Islands
Great White Shark, Farallon Islands

Great White Sharks at the Farallon Islands

Great White Sharks are seasonal feeders at the Farallon Islands from approximately August through November. Farallon Island Sea Lions are abundant and, evidently, easy pickings. During these months, there is a possibility of spotting a White Shark feeding in the waters near the Farallon Islands. (Biologists prefer that we use the correct "White Shark", ok, ok...but we still think they're Great.)

Our trips are not shark watching expeditions, they are natural history whale watching expeditions - no promises of a shark sighting, but if nature happens to oblige you with a shark feeding, we won't charge you extra, promise.

This photo of a White Shark was taken near the Farallones during one of our whale watching expeditions. The birds in the picture alerted us to the shark. On this particular day we had two Naturalists on board who were able to identify the shark and teach us more about the behavior we were witnessing. "Our" White Shark was about 25 feet long - scale him/her to the sailboat in the picture! The shark was eating a seal and surfaced a few times in the course of a 15-20 minute feeding. It was very exciting.

The Farallones are home to many types of sharks, not just White Sharks. But it's the White Sharks who get most of the press; every time a short board surfer has the bad luck of a close encounter we start hearing the music from "Jaws" - our phones ring steady with queries "will I see Great Whites?!"

White Sharks are currently at a near extinction level, and lobbying efforts are underway to add them to the endangered species list. Scientific studies based at the Farallones have revealed much about the sharks. The Farallones provide a platform for observation and study of White Sharks in a natural habitat, and it is hoped that the research will yield understanding and protection.

Great White Adventures provides scuba divers with the opportunity to observe Great White Sharks up close in their natural environment. They have trips to the Farallones running throughout shark season. Check out their website for lots more information about White Sharks.

Great White Adventures
875 A Island Dr. #338
Alameda, CA 94502-6768
510-814-8256
dive@greatwhiteadventures.com
Great White Adventures

Near by is the Cordell Bank National Marine Santuary. This Sanctuary was set aside in 1981. It protects an underwater mountain range and one of the richest marine habitats on the West Coast. The Cordell Banks marks the edge of the Continental Shelf.

For More Information on the Farallon Islands:
Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary Sanctuary Visitor Center at Crissy Field in San Francisco.
The Presidio, Building 991
San Francisco, CA 94129
phone: 415-561-6622
fax: 415-561-6616
web: http://farallones.nos.noaa.gov
email:farallones@noaa.gov
or their main web site at: Farallones Marine Sanctuary Association The Farallones Marine Sanctuary Association (FMSA) is a non-profit, cooperating association that helps protect the resources managed by the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary through collaborative education, interpretation, outreach, and research.


Great White Shark being scaled by 4o foot Sailboat in bacground. White Shark being scaled by 40 foot sailboat in background. We estimated this shark to be about 25 feet long. The dots indicate the dorsal fin and the tail fin. This was a seal feeding event that we witnessed for about 20 minutes. (We DO NOT chum or in any other way attract White Sharks on these trips!)

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The Devil's Teeth : A True Story of Obsession and Survival Among America's Great White Sharks by Susan Casey on her Farallon Island White Shark experience
NEW White Shark


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  • NEW White Shark Monterey Bay Aquarium