Large shark washes ashore on Southern California beach

A 13-foot thresher shark washed ashore in Huntington Beach on Wednesday with a hook in its mouth.

A 13-foot thresher shark washed ashore in Huntington Beach on Wednesday with a hook in its mouth.

Images of the shark were posted to Facebook by the California State University Long Beach Shark Lab. The mature female shark was collected by lab personnel and a necropsy was planned for Thursday.

Thresher sharks, which can measure nearly 20 feet, are targeted by anglers but it was not immediately clear if being hooked was a factor in the shark’s death.

The shark’s length was measured from snout to the tip of its tail fin. Thresher sharks, which are not considered dangerous to humans, use their scythe-like tails to stun prey.

–Top image courtesy of the CSLB Shark Lab

Watch: Ferocious mako shark, fisherman engage in tug of war

A prominent Southern California shark tagger has documented his tug of war with a ferocious mako shark, he said, to showcase the species’ “beauty, power, and strength.”

A prominent Southern California shark tagger has documented his tug of war with a ferocious mako shark, he said, to showcase the species’ “beauty, power, and strength.”

“I’m their ambassador,” Poe told FTW Outdoors.

The accompanying footage shows the 12-foot shark refusing to release a bonito tied to a rope and fighting for possession with head shakes, much in the way a dog might refuse to let go of a stuffed toy.

(There was no hook in the bait; the shark could have let go at any time.)

The footage opens with Poe tapping the shark’s head, as if to signal the start of a competition, as the shark surfaces with the bonito inches from his boat.

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The competition ends after about a minute, when the shark releases the bonito and Poe declares, “That’s right, it’s my fish baby! Come back again when you want to play!”

Poe tags white sharks and mako sharks for the Marine Conservation Science Institute. He typically keeps hookless baits in the water to let him know when sharks arrive in the chum slick.

“When I want to tag a white shark or a mako shark, I use a hook and a hand line,” Poe explained.

The MCSI team, including Poe, are featured in the National Geographic documentary “Counting Jaws,” which examines a newly discovered great white shark aggregation site off California.

Poe also will appear in several episodes of the Discovery series, “Shark Week,” which begins July 24.

Shark Week means Shaq Week for the NFL sack king

Buccaneers linebacker and reigning sack king Shaq Barrett got the Shark Week treatment from the team on Instagram.

It’s Shark Week, and boy do we need some shark entertainment in our lives right now.

Buccaneers tight end Rob Gronkowski is a veteran of Shark Week, having taken part in the Discovery Channel celebration back in 2018. While Gronk is too busy at training camp this year to get his feet wet with the big fish, his new teammate, NFL sack king Shaq Barrett, got the Shark Week treatment as the team posted this Jaws-inspired picture featuring their star linebacker.

View this post on Instagram

Welcome to Shaq Week 🦈

A post shared by Tampa Bay Buccaneers (@buccaneers) on

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Mike Tyson promises a ‘bite’ in Shark Week’s ‘Rumble in Reef’

Mike Tyson promises that “someone’s going to get bit” when he goes toe-to-fin with Jaws in Shark Week’s Rumble in the Reef.

Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson promises that “someone’s going to get bit” when he goes toe-to-fin with Jaws in Shark Week’s Rumble in the Reef next month.

What exactly “Tyson vs. Jaws: Rumble on the Reef” will look like is left to the imagination as Discovery Channel is keeping mum on the details, but it did say famed ring announcer Michael Buffer will be calling the shots.

It also said Tyson will try to score a TKO over the massive shark…all in the name of research.

“I took on this challenger to overcome fears I still deal with in life,” Tyson said. “I equate this with overcoming my fear of getting back into the ring at 54 years old.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Great white shark chased by prey in odd encounter

“I learned from this experience doing Shark Week that whatever intimidates me, I am still able to step up to the challenge of overcoming anything that would prevent me from accomplishing my life’s mission of reaching my highest potential in life and bringing me closer to God.”

Tyson, known for biting off part of Evander Holyfield’s ear in the Bite Fight of 1997, made the statement that “someone’s going to get bit” during a promo video, which shows the Baddest Man on the Planet reduced to having difficult blowing up an inner tube. To which he replied, “Shark Week is hard, man.”

Discovery Channel noted that no sharks were harmed or bitten in the making of this episode, which kicks off Shark Week on Aug. 9. So does this mean the shark bites Tyson? Hmm.

Photos courtesy of Discovery Channel.

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