Four Southern California great white sharks have resided on display at the Monterey Bay Aquarium since 2004-each in the Outer Bay exhibit for as long as six months before being released back into the wild. Aquarium spokespeople say the display program has benefited public perception of sharks everywhere and, ultimately, will boost interest and activism in preserving the ocean’s diminishing shark populations. However, five great whites have died in the hands of the Monterey Bay Aquarium since 2004, when the facility began acquiring juveniles entangled in the nets of certain boats and, consequently, critics have suggested that the aquarium is doing less for wild great whites than it is for its own box office sales.
Monterey Bay Aquarium spokesperson Ken Peterson claimed the display program “hasn’t been a big income generator,” adding that at least $500,000 of ticket sales revenue in recent years has funded studies of wild great whites, which are regularly captured off the California coast, fitted with transmitters, and surveyed remotely as they range about the eastern Pacific. Moreover, Peterson noted that seeing a live great white eye to eye is an immeasurably powerful experience for aquarium visitors. “By opening tens of thousands of people up to the experience and emotional connection with an animal that has been so vilified for so long, we believe we’re providing a net benefit to the species,” he said.
The exhibited great whites have been caught by fishers targeting halibut and white sea bass with nets-and by aquarium biologists with hook and line-in the waters just south of Santa Barbara, often on the productive halibut ground known as the Ventura Flats. Intentionally catching great whites in California has been illegal since 1994, when the California Department of Fish and Game banned recreational and commercial take. However, the state prohibition offers a stipulation: “If landed alive incidentally in set gill nets, drift gill nets, or round-haul nets, [great whites] may only be sold for scientific or live display purposes.” The Monterey Bay Aquarium holds the required paperwork to purchase and retain “incidentally” caught great whites.
But are these sharks truly being caught incidentally?
Commercial fishers who turn over great whites to science receive payment. According to one veteran commercial fisherman in the area, the Monterey Bay Aquarium offers fishers a stipend of $300 for a dead great white and $2,000 for a live specimen. The fisherman guessed he has sold as many as 10 great whites to the aquarium in recent years, including six in 2006. Two of that season’s sharks had died in the net, he says. (Several other area fishers did not return calls for this story.) Ironically, the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch program advises consumers to avoid halibut caught by gillnetters, citing the fishery as “unsustainable.” Yet the aquarium itself pays these very fishers to hand over a protected species.
Sean Van Sommeran, an independent shark researcher and founder of the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation, said he suspects that such a monetary reward system could motivate gillnetters to set their gear in places known to be frequented by juvenile great whites, such as the Ventura Flats, where sharks gather May through September. “If they’re paying these guys for sharks dead or alive, then the way I see it, that’s a commercial fishery for [great] white sharks,” said Van Sommeran, who was among the first Californians to urge the state to ban the killing of great whites in the early 1990s.
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Many scientists, some involved with the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation, are also involved in studying the species.
Archived catch records from the California Department of Fish and Game, which requires that all commercial catch of all species be weighed and reported, show a dramatic increase in annual great white landings beginning in 2004, the year that the aquarium first displayed a live member of the species. Before then, landings were scant. In 1997, 258 pounds of great white were reported, all from the Los Angeles/Santa Barbara area. In 1998, 138 pounds were weighed. None were reported in 1999. The Santa Barbara area produced 149 pounds in 2000, while a fluke catch of a 1,700-pound adult came from Morro Bay. In 2001, 86 pounds-possibly two sharks-were caught in 2001, all from the Santa Barbara area. Records from 2002 and 2003 indicate zero great white landings statewide.
But in 2004, the reported landings of “incidentally” caught great whites jumped to 422 pounds. Subsequent annual landings of great whites came in at 410 pounds in 2005, 467 pounds in 2006, and 568 pounds in 2007-all from local waters, where the juveniles gather in the shallows. In 2008, 18 great whites between 50 and 90 pounds were landed, tagged, and eventually released, according to Dr. Christopher Lowe, a Cal State, Long Beach marine biology professor who regularly handles the sharks entangled in nets. One of 2008’s great whites was shuttled to Monterey to the Outer Bay exhibit in late August, where it resided for 11 days before being returned to the ocean after its health deteriorated.
In spite of the dramatic increase in landings, area fisherman Ben Henke says he and other fishers never string their nets with the intent of catching great whites. “It’s pretty hard to target these fish,” he said. “They’re all incidentals. You probably couldn’t target one any better than if you just waited for one to come along.” Yet Henke and several other fishers catch great whites so reliably that, with the financial assistance of aquarium affiliates, they have installed live holding tanks on their vessels. The seawater-fed tanks can be used to contain live halibut, but the fisherman said the feature was installed on his boat largely for sharks.
Monterey Bay Aquarium
LOOKING FOR SHARKS: It’s not just fishermen who track down great whites. The Monterey Bay Aquarium also set up a floating pen off Point Dume near Malibu in 2002.



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Comments
Great article... Very informative.
These sharks are magnificent creatures - one of our favorite topics over at http://www.fearbeneath.com.
Perhaps someday we'll get some Great Whites at the Sea Center out on the wharf.
fearbeneath (anonymous profile)
December 9, 2008 at 11:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)
No, please not at the Sea Center. That place is run so badly. It is an embarrassment to the community.
lisaw (anonymous profile)
December 10, 2008 at 7:24 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I don't believe it is the number of great white sharks declining since they are protected.
What has declined is the tagging revenue for PSRF. Now all of these fishing boats are doing the tagging Sean used to.
Rudy (anonymous profile)
February 22, 2009 at 2:45 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Rudy Socha, who makes the false allegation (above) that 'fishing boats' are doing the tagging we once did is false.
Rudy works for the aquaria trade/market and is charged with squelching and distorting the record on issues touching upon the aquarium/gift store trade to which he is attached.
The gill netters are being payed to fish for white sharks in Southern California where protections are weaker than in Monterey Bay region where I have been conducting white shark research in the wild since 1990.
http://www.pelagic.org/topp/topp.html
http://www.pelagic.org/research/index...
http://www.pelagic.org/anireport/
If anyone has any questions dont hesitate to contact us.
Sean R. Van Sommeran
Executive Director/CEO
The Pelagic Shark Research Foundation
831-600-5214 (boat phone)
psrf@pelagic.org
WWW.PELAGIC.ORG
Santa Cruz California
Since 1990
Togodamnus (anonymous profile)
April 17, 2009 at 9:55 a.m. (Suggest removal)