Debate rages over huge shark that barely fit into fishermen’s boat

Fishermen caught an 870-pound tiger shark and somehow managed to pull it into their small boat. The catch ignited a “furious debate.”

Six fishermen in Australia caught an 870-pound tiger shark and somehow managed to pull it into their small boat, prompting the usual calls for them needing a bigger boat.

But the catch also ignited controversy.

The tiger shark was caught Sunday off the coast of Sydney by Dark Horse captain Paul Barning and his crew, as reported by Yahoo! News Australia, which stated that the catch “sparked furious debate” on the Port Hacking Game Fishing Club’s Facebook page.

Though they did nothing illegal, as Aussie fishermen are allowed to keep one tiger shark in their daily catch, they were criticized for killing a species of shark that is labeled internationally as “near threatened” by the IUCN Red List of endangered species.

Many online commenters were impressed with the size of the giant apex predator while others were saddened it was killed, with one calling it “selfish stupidity.”

Lawrence Chlebeck, a shark expert for the Humane Society International, is critical of those killing large sharks for sport with Australian scientists noting a 74 percent decrease in tiger sharks over the last 50 years.

“We need to recognize these magnificent species for what they are and do everything we can to make sure that they don’t fall further into decline,” Chlebeck told Yahoo! News Australia.

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New South Wales Game Fishing Association president Garry Chenoweth countered the argument, however.

“Our guys are not out there just to murder everything that’s in the water,” he told Yahoo! News Australia. “Those guys [in the photo] have taken just one fish.

“[Sport fishermen] don’t even rate on the 1 percent scale in terms of the impact on oceanic species…It’s really easy to defend [game fishing], but people don’t want to see the actual statistics. [People] just see a picture [of a shark being caught online] and want to lynch everybody up.”

The Daily Mail Australia stated that the fishermen fought the huge tiger shark for 45 minutes. It was unclear how they managed to get it into the boat.

The Leader reported that another large shark was caught and shown in an image (below) on the Port Hacking Game Fishing Club’s Facebook page, but that the page was not available, that the link might be broken or the page removed.

Among other comments on the post, according to Yahoo! News Australia:

“My daughter is 9; I just showed her the picture, as we caught a small mako a few weeks ago, and she said she thinks you caught a JAWS!”

“How did you get that on the boat without destroying it? Would’ve been kicking very hard.”

“How did you not get chomped?”

Good questions, indeed.

Photos courtesy of Port Hacking Game Fishing Club.

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Harrowing moments for father and son as shark attacks kayak

A Maui father-and-son survived a harrowing encounter with a large shark Tuesday as they kayaked together off the island’s west side.

A Maui father-and-son survived a harrowing encounter with a large shark Tuesday as they kayaked together off the island’s west side.

Daniel and Tristan Sullivan were searching for whales when the shark – possibly a great white shark – bit and thrashed their kayak, spilling them into the water.

“When its mouth rose up and bit into the kayak, it was like a scene out of a movie,” Daniel Sullivan, the father, told Hawaii News Now. “The water streaming off of it, these giant teeth coming right at us, and then the way it just pushed the entire boat up halfway and pulled us back down into the water.”

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Both kayakers swam toward shore for about 35 minutes as the shark continued to bite their kayak. The paddlers were not injured.

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Hawaii’s Department of Land and Natural Resources issued a statement regarding the incident:

“Just before 2 p.m., a father and son reported to the Maui Dispatch Center that they were kayaking in the 1000 Peaks area (Ukumehame), when a shark attacked their boat. They fell overboard when the kayak sank, and they were able to safely swim to shore.

“They reported the shark as a ten-foot tiger shark. Personnel from DAR and DOCARE officers are now attempting to get more information from the pair.”

Tiger sharks are most often implicated in attacks on humans and/or their kayaks and surfboards in Hawaiian waters. However, the Sullivans said this shark’s snout was pointier than the more rounded snouts of tiger sharks.

Great white sharks are rare in Hawaii, but adult white sharks from the U.S. and Mexico migrate as far west as Hawaii during the fall and winter. Bite marks visible on the bottom of the kayak appear to be from a large shark.

Tristan Sullivan, 15, described the encounter via Instagram:

“Today my dad and I were out kayaking when a massive shark bit our kayak and flipped us into the water we tried to get back into it but it was taking on water fast and we kept falling back into the water. At the time we were about a mile out and eventually we had to leave our kayak and start swimming in knowing the whole time the shark could be right behind us thankfully we made it back safe.”

The DNLR closed beaches in the area and they were set to reopen Wednesday at noon.

–Image showing bite marks on the kayak is courtesy of Tristan Sullivan

Kayak angler reacts to fast approaching tiger shark

Devin Kanda was fortunate to have seen the tiger shark closing in as he sat with his feet dangling from his kayak.

Devin Kanda was fortunate to have seen the tiger shark closing in as he sat with his feet dangling from his kayak.

As Hawaii News Now states in the video report posted below, Kanda had just caught an 18-pound ono off Diamond Head when he spotted the approaching shark, enabling a quick response.

“I caught it in my peripheral [vision] … and I looked up,” he said. “And just in time I pulled my leg before it could take a bite of my foot.”

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Kanda’s video camera was operating during the July 4 encounter; his footage was picked up by Hawaii-based media outlets over the weekend.

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The shark appears to have been attracted by the scent of fish, and Kanda just happened to be facing in the right direction. He said he was more in awe of the large shark than afraid, but thankful that he wasn’t attacked.

–Image courtesy of Devin Kanda