Spearfisherman fined for killing 40-year-old Gus, an iconic blue fish

A man in Australia is being harshly criticized by the locals for killing a beloved blue grouper, a fish that had been protected since 1996.

A spearfisherman in Australia is being harshly criticized by the locals for killing Gus the Grouper, a beloved 40-year-old blue fish that had been protected since 1996.

On December 30, a 26-year-old man from New Zealand was spearfishing at Old Park in Cronulla, a suburb of Sydney, and speared the iconic fish, doing so in a no-spearfishing zone, as reported by NZHerald.co.nz and News.com. au.

The blue grouper, known for being non-aggressive and inquisitive, became the official fish of New South Wales in 1996, when it became protected from spearfishing and commercial enterprise.

Tenielle Piek, a local woman, told News.com.au that the “gorgeous bright blue fish” is well known to other divers and swimmers in the area. Piek’s family had swum with Gus for 30 years. She witnessed the incident.

“The man pulled the grouper out of the water triumphantly,” she said. “Locals were shocked and outraged … My mother was the first person to approach the man requesting to take his photo. He smiled and showed off his killing without realizing it was a protected species and could be fined up to $11,000 for spearing a blue grouper.”

The spearfisherman was ultimately fined $537 after being questioned by police.

“Gus, you were more than just a diving buddy,” Abyss Scuba Diving wrote on Facebook. “You were a true companion, joining me on countless dives at Oak Park, Cronulla. Your untimely demise on December 30, 2023, at the hands of a spearfisherman has left us devastated.”

More from Daily Mail Australia:

“Grouper are protected from commercial fishing and spearfishing, and can only legally be taken by line in NSW. For recreational fishers a minimum size limit of 30cm and a bag limit of two (with only one fish over 60cm) applies,” the spokesperson [from the Department of Primary Industries] said.

“Maximum penalties by way of court prosecution for an individual are $22,000 and/or six months imprisonment for a first offense relating to size and bag limits, and $11,000 for taking grouper by an unlawful method.”

Spearfisherman fights off shark attack; ‘thought it was my last day’

A spearfisherman feared for his life when a shark charged and bit him in the leg, forcing him to fight off the attack with his speargun.

A spearfisherman in Australia “thought it was my last day” Sunday when a bull shark charged and bit him in the leg, forcing him to fight off the attack with his speargun.

Phillip Brown, 24, was fishing for barramundi near Rocky Island off Yarrabah when he came face to face with the shark after exploring a cave 10-feet deep, according to TropicNow (a news agency in Cairns) and the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

https://www.facebook.com/TropicNow/posts/3117598161857034

“We sort of both got a fright from each other, but I was still a long way from the rocks, so I tried to swim a bit faster to the rock,” he told TropicNow.

“I knew what was going to happen; he’s a bull shark, he’s going to have a go at me.

“As I just grabbed the rock, it came up from behind and grabbed my leg.

“I just felt a big, numb jerk. It twisted, popped my knee out the socket. If I didn’t have the dislocated knee, I think he probably would have ripped it off.

“I stabbed him on top of the head with the spear gun and he took off, but he kept circling around because I was losing a lot of blood.”

But by then, Brown was in ankle-deep water where two friends and two nephews came to his rescue, using an anchor rope as a tourniquet around his thigh and a shirt tied to his lower leg to stem the flow of blood.

They carried him to the boat and transported him to a hospital in his hometown of Yarrabah where he was initially treated before being airlifted to Cairns Hospital where he underwent surgery. The extent of his injuries was unclear.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Backpacker has standoff with cougar, birds come to her rescue (video)

“I thought it was my last day,” he told TropicNow. “I thought I was going to lose my leg or lose my life.”

The traumatic experience has not deterred him from going spearfishing again.

“I go a lot of places diving — Batt Reef, Tongue Reef, all the outer reefs,” he told ABC.

“And then I get torn up at home, right in my own front yard — it was just the wrong place at the wrong time I guess.

“I’ll be going back diving, but I won’t be diving back at home. I’ll just go back out to the reefs, in the clear water.”

Photo of sharks courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.

Shark charges spearfisherman, bites off swim fin

Video footage shows a bull shark charging a spearfisherman in an encounter in which the 17-year-old diver thought he would lose his foot.

Lachlan Pye, a 17-year-old spearfisherman, experienced a frightening encounter with a bull shark that “came out of nowhere” and bit off his right swim fin. The young diver thought he would lose his foot.

The harrowing incident occurred last Saturday off Lucinda, Queensland, Australia. Pye was diving with a friend as another friend remained on the boat to keep an eye out for such an incident as this.

It started when a friend shot a golden snapper that fell off his spear, Pye explained to USA Today/For The Win Outdoors.

“I went down for a look and saw it just sitting on the bottom,” Pye said. “I took the easy shot and started to come up. As I came up, this bull shark charged me. It came out of nowhere.”

The shark wasn’t interested in the fish but Pye’s swim fin, which it bit into and pulled off his foot, as seen in the video:

“I thought I was going to lose my foot to be honest with you,” Pye told For The Win Outdoors. “I thought it was going to try to bite me again. I was just kicking up trying to get away from it.

“When I came in, I was really freaking out and was in shock.”

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

Pye lost the swim fin, but not the fish or speargun.

At first, he also lost his desire to go diving again, but he regained it when people told him his fins had attracted the shark with their flashy, white rails along the sides.

Pye’s mother, Karen Wood, probably desires he not go diving again, however.

“When he came home, he was quite vague and sketchy about the details,” Wood told For The Win Outdoors. “I was having birthday drinks and he casually told me a shark bit his new fin. I asked him, did it do much damage and he’s like, yeah, it took it. Didn’t go into too much detail. Then he showed me his video the next day and I nearly died from a heart attack once I saw how serious it was and how big the shark was.”

Photos courtesy of Lachlan Pye and ViralHog.

Follow David Strege and the outdoors on Facebook.

Spearfisherman dragged out to sea by great white shark

An eyewitness believed a spearfisherman had been fatally attacked by a great white shark after noticing only a fishing floatation buoy bobbing in the waters 200 yards off South Africa with no sign of the diver. But when rescuers arrived on the …

spearfisherman from Plettenberg Bay Rescue Base

An eyewitness believed a spearfisherman had been fatally attacked by a great white shark after noticing only a fishing floatation buoy bobbing in the waters 200 yards off South Africa with no sign of the diver.

But when rescuers arrived on the scene, they found spearfisherman Theodore Prinsloo safely on shore with an amazing story to share about a 16-foot shark dragging him out to sea, this according to the National Sea Rescue Institute Plettenberg Bay station commander Marc Rodgers.

Prinsloo was on vacation with his family in Nature’s Valley, a holiday resort on the Southern Cape coast, when the incident occurred Wednesday.

He noticed a shark swimming in the vicinity he was spearfishing and suspected it was the same shark that had been seen in the area the day before. Prinsloo had kept close to the rocks as the shark swam up close to him at one point.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Watch shark knock 7-year-old boy off surfboard

Twenty minutes after hooking a 20-pound musselcracker fish onto his fishing floatation buoy, the shark reappeared and grabbed the fish and began swimming out to sea, dragging Prinsloo with it. Rodgers said the shark took Prinsloo about 165 feet before the diver managed to unhook the floatation buoy from his spear gun and escape the shark.

He then quickly swam to shore.

The crew aboard the NSRI rescue craft did make one rescue on the day, but it was too late to save the musselcracker, as only its head remained.

“We recovered the buoy, line and the fish head onto our sea rescue craft and Theodore and his family came to fetch the buoy and line at our sea rescue base,” Rodgers said. “Theodore [said] that he needs the buoy to go spearfishing tomorrow and is grateful that NSRI recovered his buoy.”

Photo showing Prinsloo getting his floatation buoy back courtesy of the National Sea Rescue Institute.

Follow David Strege and the outdoors on Facebook.