The hunt for Europe’s great white shark

American research group Ocearch has more than 15 years’ experience in catching, tagging and tracking great white sharks all over the world, contributing to filling in the many gaps in knowledge about the ocean predator.
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Ocearch came to Europe for the first time in the summer, hoping to study the elusive Mediterranean great white – about which little is known. Due to decades of overfishing, pollution and poaching in European waters, these sharks are now critically endangered, with huge consequences lower down the food chain.
Ocearch believe that in showing these sharks are present in the east Atlantic, they can kickstart a collective move towards healthier, abundant seas – they just need to prove they are there. The Guardian joined them on the search

00.00 – Introducing Ocearch (shark research, tagging, tracker)
00.53 – Expedition Save the Med (mediterranean great white shark, ocean conservation, range)
03.11 – How do you catch a great white shark? (methods, ethics)
05.57 – A shark sighting in Brest (fishers, history, folklore, pollack)
07.24 – The French method (scientists, research, Brittany, porbeagles, harpoons, university)
08.48 – The hunt begins (bait, fishing, lines, patience)
10.35 – The mental battle (sponsorship, finances, pressure)

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#greatwhiteshark #sharks #greatwhite #sharkhunt #shark

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27 COMMENTS

  1. They didn't even go to the Mediterranean Sea. They stayed in the Atlantic, Northern Spain, France and Ireland, where I believe there have been no confirmed sightings of great whites. There are hundreds of sightings, reports and even attacks of whites in the Med, they should have gone to northern Italy or around Malta. It makes sense to go to the Med if you are trying to tag a great white from the Med not the Northern Atlantic, but what do I know they are the scientists 🤷‍♂️

  2. I suspect any GWS in those contested European waters are a lost animal straying or historical sightings now impossible due to overfishing or otherwise anomaly.
    they are unlikely to exist there in biologically representative numbers.
    where I come from they are known, seen, they are curious n everywhere. there is a clear large protein sourse and critically watertemps n flows is favorable , that simply doesn't exist where ur focusing
    rather than focus on this edge case or fantasy best focus resources for analysis elsewhere

  3. Great piece of film @Guardian and well documented. Everyone has an opinion on it. Are they / aren’t they here? Occasional visitors to the UK, probably yes.

    If you think there are 4 species of shark which can self-regulate their body temperature. Porbeagle, Thresher, Mako and GW. We have 3 out of the 4.

    The mako numbers in the UK are extremely low, which would indicate why the GW numbers are lower (as they are less common in numbers than a Mako).

    Interesting film, and wasn’t expecting Ocearch to find anything in UK waters. Definitely more of a chance in Biscay area, but if they wanted to save the ‘Med’, why not go into the med, where they are known to frequent, and tag one there. Then you would know categorically where they travel, if they do leave the med.

    Definitely more feasible now that the Tuna numbers in the UK have rocketed and the Seal population has increased expediently. 🦈

  4. hey guys , start @ the farallons if your allowed there , they have not been fished out unlike australia and south africa since the 70's ! , they are 16 to 18 ft. avg. there and track deep blue , she's 20ft. , i am a g.w. fan for sure , love your vids n content , such a touchy subject when your talking about a apex predator in our oceans , thanks > tom !

  5. this guy is NOT A SCIENTIST. No scientist talks in such definitive statements, especially wrong statements.
    If the commercial fishermen know of a fish population in French waters, let me tell you that the French scientists know about it too.
    Who is funding this comic? Probably some Elon Musk type.

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