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Common Thresher Shark |
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Family: |
Alopiidae (Thresher sharks) |
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Genus and Species: |
Alopias vulpinus |
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Description: |
The body of the common thresher
shark is moderately elongate. The snout is rather short, and the
mouth crescent shaped. The first dorsal fin is large, and located
midway between the pectoral and ventral fins. The second dorsal
and anal fins are very small. The tail is distinctive since it is
very long, almost as long as the rest of the body. The coloration
may vary from brownish gray, bluish or blackish above to silvery,
bluish or golden below. The dorsal, pectoral and ventral fins are
blackish and sometimes the pectoral and ventral fins have a white
dot in the lip. The bigeye thresher also occurs off the California
coast. It can be distinguished by its large eye; however, if you
can count the teeth in the upper jaw, the common thresher has 21 -
22 on each side while the bigeye thresher has 10 - 11 on each
side. |
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Range: |
The common thresher shark occurs
worldwide in warmer seas. In the eastern North Pacific, it is
found from central Baja California, to the Strait of Juan de Fuca,
British Columbia. The common thresher is an inhabitant of the
upper layers of deep offshore waters and is most abundant in areas
of steep bottom contour along the edges of the continental shelf.
During the spring and summer months smaller threshers may occur
near shore where they are often seen leaping completely out of the
water. |
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Natural History: |
The food habits of the thresher
are not well known, but on the California coast they feed mostly
upon small fish such as sardines, anchovies, mackerel, and squid.
They are said to use their long tail as a flail to frighten or
stun their prey. The common thresher shark bears live young and
appears to become sexually mature in 6 or 7 years. Four pups are
produced annually. A 18 foot female contained four young that
weighed 13.5 pounds each and were 4 to 4.5 feet long. |
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Fishing Information: |
Most thresher sharks caught off
California have been taken on live sardines, anchovies, or
mackerel. Best localities have been the San Francisco Bay area,
the inshore coastal water between Point Conception and Port
Hueneme, and Santa Monica Bay, especially around Malibu and
Paradise Cove.
They are most abundant during the summer months. Considered a fine
game species on light or medium tackle, they often put on an
aerial demonstration. At other times the battle is entirely
beneath the surface and consists of brute strength and
shift-towing tactics. An angler would do well to bait a live
mackerel on a 9/0 hook attached to 10 or so feet of heavy wire
leader. |
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Other Common Names: |
thresher, blue thresher, green
thresher, longtail shark, swiveltail, fox shark, sea fox. |
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Largest Recorded: |
20 feet; 1,000 pounds. Largest
taken off California by a recreational angler: 527 pounds. |
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Habitat: |
Pelagic Environment |
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