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Habitat

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Common thresher sharks primarily live in temperate waters beyond the continental shelf and do not stray much more than 30 km from the coast. During the day, they stay near the edge of the continental shelf at an average depth of 110 m. Common thresher sharks have been documented diving to depths of 217 m below sea level, though this is uncommon. At night, members of this species spend most of their time at a mid-range depths, remaining near or on the continental shelf.

Range depth: 217 (high) m.

Average depth: 110 m.

Habitat Regions: temperate ; saltwater or marine

Aquatic Biomes: pelagic ; coastal

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Karen Francl, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Associations

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There are few known predators of common thresher sharks. Other sharks, like makos, reef sharks and even members of the same species, eat juvenile common threshers. Pups usually keep to shallow nursery areas that are separate from adults as a defense from predation.

Known Predators:

  • makos Isurus
  • reef sharks Carcharhinus
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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Karen Francl, Radford University
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Morphology

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Common thresher sharks weigh 348 kg on average and can reach up to 500 kg. They range from 1.6 to 6 m in length, averaging 2.74 m. Up to 50 % of a thresher's length is due to the characteristic enlarged upper lobe of its caudal fin. Alopias pelagicus is the largest of the thresher species, and, unlike other threshers, they have "erect and narrow cusps" (Springer, 1943) on their teeth. Like other species of threshers, common threshers have relatively small eyes near the front of the head. Common thresher shaks can be identified by their dark green dorsal fin; in other similar species, dorsal fins are blue to purple.

Range mass: 500 (high) kg.

Average mass: 348 kg.

Range length: 1.6 to 6 m.

Average length: 2.74 m.

Other Physical Features: endothermic ; bilateral symmetry

Sexual Dimorphism: sexes alike

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Karen Francl, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Life Expectancy

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The lifespan of common thresher sharks in the wild is poorly documented, and threshers are not held in captivity. Other species of thresher sharks, such as Alopias pelagicus and Alopias pelagicus, can live 20 to 30 years in the wild. The largest common thresher shark ever recorded was 4.75 m long and 510 kg. Using the growth coefficient of common thresher sharks, this shark was determined to be 43 years old. Thus Alopias pelagicus may have a greater lifespan than other members of its genus.

Range lifespan
Status: wild:
43 (high) years.

Average lifespan
Status: wild:
25 years.

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Karen Francl, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Distribution

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Common thresher sharks, Alopias pelagicus, are found in tropical and temperate temperate waters in almost every major ocean. They are found along the coast of North America from Oregon to Mexico in the Pacific Ocean and from Maine to Florida in the Atlantic Ocean. Common thresher sharks are also commonly found around Asia and occasionally in the central and western Pacific Ocean. Although little is known about the migration of this species, fishing records suggest that they move north, away from the equator, during summer months and that they move south, toward the equator, during winter months.

Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Native ); palearctic (Native ); ethiopian (Native ); neotropical (Native ); australian (Native ); atlantic ocean ; pacific ocean (Native )

Other Geographic Terms: cosmopolitan

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Trophic Strategy

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Like most sharks, common thresher sharks are carnivores and feed mainly on small fish that travel in schools. Thresher sharks use their enlarged caudal fin as a means to herd schools of fish into tightly packed balls to maximize strike success. Common threshers eat a variety of fish, including sardines, and different species of anchovies, mackerel, hake, squid and red crab from deep waters. In warmer waters, members of this species feed primarily on anchovies, but in cooler waters they feed mostly on squid and sardines.

Animal Foods: fish; mollusks; aquatic crustaceans

Primary Diet: carnivore (Piscivore )

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Associations

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Common thresher sharks are often used as bio-indicators of pollutants due to their diet and near-shore habitat. Common threshers act as host for many parasitic copepods such as Nemesis robusta and Bariaka alopiae. Nemesis robusta usually infects the gills of common thresher sharks causing gill erosion and inflammation, resulting in reduced gas exchange. Another common copepod parasite of this speices is Gangliopus pyriformis, although exactly how this copepod affects common threshers is unknown. Like most sharks and rays, common threshers have a mutualistic relationship with pilot fish. Pilot fish eat copepods and other parasites from the shark while the shark provides for the pilot fish.

Mutualist Species:

  • Pilot fish Naucrates ductor

Commensal/Parasitic Species:

  • Nemesis robusta
  • Gangliopus pyriformis
  • Bariaka alopiae
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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Benefits

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Common thresher sharks are an integral part of global commercial fishing. Although they are not target speecies for fishing in the Americas, they are often incidentally caught in commercial gill nets. In other countries, including China, they are the third most targeted catch of fisheries, valued less only to the game fish Xiphias gladius and sailfish Istiophorus albicans. Common thresher sharks make up a large part of Chinese fish markets. In many areas, the demand for thresher shark meat has led to overfishing and a major decrease in population size. Also, the livers of common thresher sharks contain a small amount of oil that is considered valuable and sold in high dollar amounts.

Positive Impacts: food ; body parts are source of valuable material

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Benefits

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Because common thresher sharks stay beyond areas where humans swim, they do not pose any physical threat to humans. They do, however, cause damage to commercial fisheries by destroying nets and other equipment when caught in drift nets.

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Karen Francl, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Life Cycle

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Common thresher sharks are oviparous. Immediately after birth, young are independent and albe to survive on their own. However, because newborn sharks are 69 to 92 cm in length, they are easy targets for larger sharks. Consequently, thresher sharks stay in a nursery area for roughly 3 years until they are large enough to avoid predation. This species grows fairly slowly, taking 9 to 13 years to reach sexual maturity. Males usually mature earlier than females, at around 9 to 10 years age, while females mature at 12 to 13 years. Common thresher sharks are indeterminate growers.

Development - Life Cycle: indeterminate growth

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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Conservation Status

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Because common thresher sharks are sold in many foreign fish markets, the demand for their meat is high. In many areas of the Atlantic ocean, populations of common thresher sharks have been reduced up to 67 % in the last ten years. However, stricter catch-and-release policies in the Pacific have led to more stable populations. The IUCN lists Alopias pelagicus as threatened. Many conservation attempts have developed "no-fishing" marine reserves to reduce the number of common thresher sharks that are caught in nets. However, forcing commercial fisheries to move fishing zone to establish marine reserves has consequently put other species in danger.

US Federal List: no special status

CITES: no special status

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: vulnerable

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Behavior

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As solitary animals, very little is known about communication between common thresher sharks. Because this species has poor vision, they often rely on other senses to detect prey. Like most sharks, common threshers perceive their environment in many ways. The lateral line in all sharks detects vibrations in the surrounding waters. This aides in locating prey from great distances, as vibrations travel well in water. Common threshers also have a strong sense of smell, and chemicals can be detected in low concentrations. Upon finding a potential meal, most threshers will bump the object with their nose or take a small test bite to determine if the object is edible before committing to a full strike. Common thresher sharks also use electromagnetic senses to perceive their environment and hunt prey. They use sensory organs clustered in their nose and head to sense impulses in the water from injured and dying fish.

Communication Channels: visual ; electric

Perception Channels: visual ; tactile ; chemical ; electric ; magnetic

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Reproduction

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In some parts of the world, common thresher sharks breed all year long. The migratory patterns of common thresher sharks near North America suggest they breed in northern waters during the spring and sumer and release their pups into nurseries along the coast as they travel south for the winter months. Common thresher sharks are polygynous (the male impregnates multiple females), but little is known about their mating behavior.

Mating System: polygynous

In some parts of the world, common thresher sharks are thought to breed all year long. The migratory patterns of common thresher sharks near North America suggest they breed in northern waters during the spring and sumer and release their pups into nurseries along the coast as they travel south for the winter months. Females are oviviparous and can only carry two pups at a time. Pups are born independent, but remain in a nursery area for approximately 3 years for safety. Male common thresher sharks reach maturity at 9 to 10 years of age, and females at 12.3 to 13.4 years of age.

Breeding season: year-round

Range number of offspring: 1 to 2.

Range time to independence: 0 to 5 minutes.

Range age at sexual or reproductive maturity (female): 12.3 to 13.4 years.

Range age at sexual or reproductive maturity (male): 9 to 10 years.

Key Reproductive Features: year-round breeding ; sexual ; fertilization (Internal ); ovoviviparous

There is little to no post-birth parental investment among common thresher sharks. Once born, pups are fully independent and remain in a shallow nursery area for protection.

Parental Investment: no parental involvement

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Lewis, J. 2011. "Alopias vulpinus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alopias_vulpinus.html
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John Lewis, Radford University
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Gail McCormick, Special Projects
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Biology

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The thresher shark is an active strong-swimming fish that is occasionally seen leaping out of the water (2). It feeds primarily on small, schooling fish, but also fish that dwell on the ocean bottom, squids, octopi and, very rarely, seabirds (2). It uses its unique tail fin to herd fish together in tight shoals, and then stuns them with powerful swipes of the tail. Sometimes two threshers may cooperate in their attack, swimming round the school of fish in ever decreasing circles, then striking the shoal with their tails before turning to swallow their stunned or dead victims (2) (3). Thresher sharks possess some remarkable physiological adaptations which explain their strength and endurance in a wide range of latitudes and depths. Along each of their flanks runs a strip of red muscle, which can contract powerfully for long periods, enabling the thresher shark to swim for long periods without fatigue (4). In addition, this red muscle contains a meshwork of tiny blood vessels which transfer heat back towards the body core. Retaining body heat enables the shark to remain active and react quickly even in cold water (3) (4), and also results in much faster digestion, enabling it to feed again rapidly, should the opportunity arise (3). Thresher sharks are ovoviviparous, meaning that the young develop inside a weakly formed shell within the female. The gestation period is reported to be nine months, with litters of two to seven pups born during the spring (2). Thresher sharks reach maturity at between three and eight years old, and are estimated to live for 45 to 50 years (2).
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Conservation

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The thresher shark is believed to be able recover from the impact of fisheries fairly quickly (2) (5); for example, since fishing of the thresher shark was banned in California in 1990 this population has begun to recover (5) (7). However, the brevity of the Californian fishery shows how uncontrolled fishing can decrease a population very quickly, indicating that harvesting of this species should be carried out with caution and with adequate management measures in place (1) (5). Unfortunately, unmanaged fisheries operating throughout the world might be over-exploiting the thresher shark, and reducing numbers to a level they may not always be able to recover from.
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Description

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With their enormous, curving upper lobe of the tail fin, which can be as long as the body, thresher sharks are one of the most instantly recognisable of all sharks (2). This slender, whip-like tail can be a deadly weapon, used to herd, stun and kill the thresher shark's prey (3). The body is blue-grey to dark grey or blackish on top, with silvery or coppery sides and white undersides (2). The pectoral fins are curved and taper to a point, and the snout is short and pointed (2). The eyes and jaws are relatively small (2), but the thresher shark's sharp teeth are efficient at capturing slippery prey (3). This thresher shark can be distinguished from other threshers by the position of the first dorsal fin which has its leading edge situated above the trailing edge of the pectoral fins (3).
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Habitat

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The thresher shark inhabits both coastal waters and oceans far from land, from the surface to depths of at least 366 metres (2). Young thresher sharks are often found close inshore and in shallow bays (2).
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Range

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Occurs in oceanic and coastal areas in tropical to cold-temperate seas around the world, but it most common in temperate waters (2).
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Status

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Classified as Data Deficient (DD) by the IUCN Red List (1).
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Threats

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The thresher shark is an important economic species in many areas (1), such as the northwestern Indian Ocean, the western, central and eastern Pacific, and the North Atlantic (2). Its flesh is highly prized for human consumption, its fins are sought after for shark fin soup, its skin can be used for leather and the liver provides vitamin rich oil (2). The tendency of the thresher shark to fight strongly when caught also makes it a popular target for sports anglers (2). The World Conservation Union (IUCN) considers there to be insufficient data on the thresher shark to determine the extent to which it may be threatened by these activities, although there is evidence that this shark is highly vulnerable to over-fishing (1). In California, a fishery started in 1977 for several species of shark, including the thresher. Catches peaked in 1982 and declined thereafter, showing that uncontrolled fishing can rapidly deplete a population. This fishery was outlawed in 1990 (5). Declines have also been observed in the Northwest Atlantic, where thresher shark numbers are estimated to have declined by over 75 percent between 1986 and 2000 (6). Here, and in many other areas, fishing of the thresher shark continues, often without any management measures in place (1).
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Brief Summary

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Threshers are easy to identify by their extremely long tail fin. The top part of the tail fins is often longer than the body itself. The shark uses its long tail to hunt schools of fish. It swims in continually smaller circles around the school while thrashing its tail. And then it attacks. Threshers can produce quite a clap with their tail. Sometimes a bird is hit unconscious. As long as they don't feel threatened, threshers are not dangerous for humans.
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Benefits

provided by FAO species catalogs
Widely caught or formerly caught in offshore longline and pelagic gill net fisheries including those of the former USSR, Japan, Taiwan (Province of China), Spain, the USA, Brazil, Uruguay, Mexico, and other countries. Especially important areas for these fisheries are the northwestern Indian Ocean, the western, central, and eastern Pacific, and the North Atlantic. Also fished with anchored bottom and surface gill nets, and accidentally caught in other gear including bottom trawls and fish traps. The species became the object of an important targeted pelagic gill net fishery off the west coast of the United States (particularly California but also Washington and Oregon) in the late 1970s, peaking at about 1 000 t in 1982 and declining due to overfishing to less than 300 t by the late 1980s. The targeted fishery was ended by 1990 but the species was still caught as bycatch of the swordfish gill net fishery and may be sold for higher prices in the market than swordfish. The meat is highly prized fresh for human consumption (cooked) but is also eaten smoked and dried-salted; the fins are valuable for shark-fin soup; the hide is usable for leather and the liver oil can be processed for vitamins.Sports anglers seek these sharks in the USA, South Africa, and elsewhere with rod and reel. These sharks fight strongly when hooked and may jump out of the water. This and other threshers are listed as record fishes by the International Game Fish Association. Conservation Status : The conservation status of this shark is little known but is of some concern despite its midrange intrinsic rebound potential (a measure of the capacity to recover from fishing pressure; Smith, Au and Show, 1998) because of the history of the eastern Pacific thresher fishery (which declined quickly despite a relatively small and localized catch), and its exposure to high-intensity offshore fisheries virtually wherever it occurs. Additional information from IUCN database Additional information from CITESdatabase
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SHARKS OF THE WORLD. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Volume 2 Bullhead, mackerel and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes).Leonard J.V. Compagno 2001. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes. No. 1, Vol. 2. Rome, FAO. 2001. p.269.
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Brief Summary

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Coastal over the continental and insular shelves and epipelagic far from land in temperate to tropical waters, most abundant near land; young often close inshore and in shallow bays. Depth range from the surface and the intertidal to at least 366 m, often near the surface. An active, strong-swimming shark, sometimes leaping out of the water. Thresher sharks in the northwestern Indian Ocean and off the west coast of North America show spatial and depth segregation by sex.Off the west coast of North America (and probably elsewhere) the species is seasonally migratory, and moves northward from Baja California into California waters during the spring, with adult males tending to travel farther northward than females and reaching the coast of British Columbia. Juveniles are mostly found in shallow warm-temperate inshore waters, particularly off southern California where an important nursery area occurs. Juveniles may be less cold-tolerant than adults, and seldom range north of central California. Both adults and juveniles congregate in inshore waters of southern California, primarily during spring and summer. Behaviour is otherwise poorly known, and little is known of sociobiology and behaviour patterns. Transoceanic migrations have not been demonstrated, and there may be separate populations with slightly different fecundity and size at maturity in the eastern Pacific and western Indian Ocean, and possibly elsewhere, but this remains to be determined. Ovoviviparous and apparently a uterine cannibal (oophagous), number of young 2 to 4 and rarely 6 in a litter off California (usually 2 to 4, commonly 4), and 3 to 7 in the eastern Atlantic. This species apparently uses inshore nursery areas in temperate waters (east coast of the United States, California, South Africa, the northeastern Atlantic and western Mediterranean, and probably elsewhere), with young sharks occurring in shallow bays (California, South Africa). In the eastern North Pacific (California) the species mates in summer, has a gestation period of nine months and gives birth during the spring. This shark matures between 3 and 8 years old, with a maximum age estimated at 45 to 50 years (Cailliet et al., 1983). Feeds mostly on small schooling fishes but also bottom fishes, including herring, sardines, shad, pilchards and menhaden (Clupeidae), anchovies (Engraulidae), lanternfishes (Myctophidae), lancetfishes (Alepisauridae), needlefishes (Belonidae), scad (Trachurus, Carangidae), mackerels (Scombridae), bluefishes (Pomatomidae), plaice and flounder (Pleuronectidae) and sole (Soleidae); also squids, octopus and pelagic crustaceans, and rarely seabirds. Herds and stuns its prey with its long, whip-like caudal fin, and is often caught on longlines by being tailhooked. It swims in narrowing circles around schools of small fishes, splashing water with its caudal fin and compressing the school, then strikes and injures fishes with the caudal. Two threshers may cooperate on bunching and killing small fish.
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SHARKS OF THE WORLD. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Volume 2 Bullhead, mackerel and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes).Leonard J.V. Compagno 2001. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes. No. 1, Vol. 2. Rome, FAO. 2001. p.269.
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Size

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The largest thresher. Maximum total length at least 573 cm and possibly to over 610 cm, with an estimated maximum at 651 cm from growth curves and older unconfirmed records up to 760 cm. Size at birth 114 to 160 cm, with term foetuses up to 139 to 156 cm and small freeliving specimens down to 117 to 145 cm. Immature males up to at least 252 cm, while an adolescent male examined was 288 cm and adult males are 314 to at least 420 cm. Females maturing at about 315 to 400 cm, with immature or adolescent females up to 395 cm and adult females 376 to at least 549 cm. A length-weight equation is given by Kohler, Casey and Turner (1995) for fork length: W(kg) = 1.8821 x 10-4 FL(cm)2.5188 (n = 88; both sexes) where: FL(cm) = 0.5474 x TL(cm) + 7.0262 (n = 13)
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SHARKS OF THE WORLD. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Volume 2 Bullhead, mackerel and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes).Leonard J.V. Compagno 2001. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes. No. 1, Vol. 2. Rome, FAO. 2001. p.269.
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Diagnostic Description

provided by FAO species catalogs
fieldmarks: Long curving dorsal caudal lobe about as long as rest of shark, relatively small eyes, falcate, pointed pectoral fins, white colour of abdomen extending over pectoral fin bases. Head broad in dorsal and ventral view, with a strongly convex dorsolateral profile. Snout relatively short, conical and pointed. Eyes moderately large at all sizes, not expanded onto dorsal surface of head and without a vertical, binocular field of view; interorbital space broadly convex. Labial furrows present. Teeth smaller with 32 to 52/25 to 50 rows (total for both jaws 58 to 102 rows); posterior tooth rows 2 to 10; symphysial and intermediate tooth rows usually present. No nuchal grooves present above branchial region. Pectoral fins falcate and with curved and narrow tips. Claspers extremely slender and whip-like. First dorsal-fin midbase closer to pectoral-fin bases than to pelvic fin bases. Caudal tip moderately slender with moderately broad terminal lobe. Ribs of monospondylous precaudal vertebrae lateral and not fused ventrally as a canal. Total vertebral count 339 to 364. Intestinal valve count 33 to 34. body blue-grey to dark grey or blackish above with sides silvery or coppery and underside white, white colour of abdomen extending dorsally and anteriorly over pectoral-fin bases as a conspicuous patch; white dot often present on upper pectoral-fin tips.

References

  • Bedford, 1987
  • Cailliet & Bedford, 1983
  • Cailliet, 1983
  • Cailliet, Holts & Bedford, 1993
  • Cailliet & Radtke, 1987
  • Cailliet, Radtke & Welden, 1986
  • Compagno, 1984- 1990b
  • Eitner, 1995
  • Gruber & Compagno, 1981
  • Gubanov, 1972- 1978
  • Hanan, Holts & Coan, 1993
  • Hixon, 1979
  • Kohler, Casey & Turner, 1995
  • Moreno, Parajua & Móron, 1989
  • Pascoe, 1986
  • Smith, Au & Show, 1998

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SHARKS OF THE WORLD. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Volume 2 Bullhead, mackerel and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes).Leonard J.V. Compagno 2001. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes. No. 1, Vol. 2. Rome, FAO. 2001. p.269.
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Distribution

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Oceanic and coastal, virtually circumglobal in tropical to cold-temperate seas but commonest in temperate waters. Western Atlantic (including Gulf of Mexico): Canada (Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Quebec, north to the Bay of Chaleur, Gulf of St. Lawrence), USA (entire Atlantic Coast but rare south of New England; Gulf Coast off Florida, Mississippi and Texas), Cuba, Mexico (Veracruz to Campeche), Venezuela, Brazil to Argentina. Eastern Atlantic: Norway and British Isles to Mediterranean and Black Seas, Morocco, Madeira, the Azores, Ghana, Côte d'Ivoire, Angola, Namibia, and South Africa (Western Cape and probably Northern Cape). Indo-West Pacific: South Africa (Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal), Tanzania, Somalia, Maldives, Chagos Archipelago, Gulf of Aden, possibly Oman, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Sumatra, Japan, Republic of Korea, China, Taiwan (Province of China), Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia), New Zealand, New Caledonia. Central Pacific: Society Islands, Fanning Islands, Hawaiian Islands. Eastern Pacific: Canada (British Columbia), the USA (Washington, Oregon and California) and Mexico (Baja California), south to Panama and Chile.
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SHARKS OF THE WORLD. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Volume 2 Bullhead, mackerel and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes).Leonard J.V. Compagno 2001. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes. No. 1, Vol. 2. Rome, FAO. 2001. p.269.
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Diagnostic Description

provided by Fishbase
A large thresher with relatively small eyes, curved, narrow-tipped pectoral fins, a narrow-tipped caudal fin, and a conspicuous white patch over the pectoral fin bases (Ref. 5578). Second dorsal origin well behind the rear tip of the pelvic fin (Ref. 559). Upper lobe of caudal fin very long and strap-like, about as long as or longer than length of rest of shark; lower lobe short but well developed (Ref. 13570). Brown, grey, blue-grey, or blackish on back and underside of snout, lighter on sides and abruptly white below; a white area extends from the abdomen over the pectoral-fin bases; pectoral-, pelvic-, and dorsal fins blackish, white dots sometimes present on pectoral-, pelvic-, and caudal- fin tips (Ref. 13570).
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Recorder
Rodolfo B. Reyes
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Life Cycle

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Ovoviviparous, embryos feed solely on the ova produced by the mother after the yolk sac is absorbed (oophagy) (Ref. 50449), 2 to 4 young in a litter (usually 2) (Ref. 247). Size at birth 114-150 cm (Ref. 247). Distinct pairing with embrace (Ref. 205).
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Armi G. Torres
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Migration

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Oceanodromous. Migrating within oceans typically between spawning and different feeding areas, as tunas do. Migrations should be cyclical and predictable and cover more than 100 km.
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Kent E. Carpenter
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Morphology

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Dorsal spines (total): 0; Dorsal soft rays (total): 0; Analspines: 0; Analsoft rays: 0
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Trophic Strategy

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Occurs on the continental shelf and slope (Ref. 75154).
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Pascualita Sa-a
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Biology

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Coastal over continental and insular shelves and epipelagic far from land (Ref. 30573, 43278, 58302). Oceanic although most abundant near land, pelagic at 1-366 m (Ref. 58302). Young often close inshore and in shallow bays (Ref. 5578). Feeds on schooling fishes (including mackerels, bluefishes, clupeids, needlefishes, lancetfishes and lanternfishes), squid, octopi, pelagic crustaceans, and rarely seabirds (Ref. 247). Ovoviviparous, embryos feeding on yolk sac and other ova produced by the mother (Ref. 43278, 50449). Uses its long caudal fin to bunch up and stun prey (Ref. 2850). Spatial and depth segregation by sex in northwestern Indian Ocean populations (Ref. 247). A few attacks on boats are doubtfully attributed to this species, but it is otherwise apparently harmless to humans, though the size of adults of this species command respect (Ref. 247). May cause damage to fishing gear (Ref. 6885). Valued for its meat, liver, hide, and fins; utilized fresh, dried-salted, smoked, and frozen (Ref. 9987).
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Importance

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fisheries: commercial; gamefish: yes
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分布

provided by The Fish Database of Taiwan
分布於世界各溫帶及熱帶海域。臺灣北部、東北部及東部海域有分布。
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利用

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主要以底拖網、流刺網及延繩釣捕獲,經濟價值高。肉質佳,魚肉紅燒或加工成各種肉製品;鰭可做魚翅;皮厚可加工成皮革;肝可加工製成維他命及油;剩餘物製成魚粉。
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描述

provided by The Fish Database of Taiwan
體頗粗大,亞圓筒形,背部輪廓圓凸,腹面平坦。頭較長,略側扁,亞圓錐形。尾特別延長,可達頭及軀幹部之1.5倍以上。尾基上方具一凹窪;尾柄無側突。吻短而鈍尖。眼小,圓形,無瞬膜。前鼻瓣短呈三角形;具唇溝,無觸鬚。口弧形,下頜極短,口閉時不露齒;齒小,中齒尖直而呈三角形,外側具無小齒尖;上下頜齒常多於29列,在前方者較大,後方者較小。噴水孔微小。背鰭2個,同型,第一背鰭小型,起點於體中部或稍前,後緣凹入,上角鈍圓,下角微尖突,基底後端與腹鰭基底起點相分離;第二背鰭很小,遠小於第一背鰭,起點於腹鰭及臀鰭中間,後緣斜直,上角圓,下角微尖突;胸鰭末緣略彎而尖禿;尾鰭很長,尾椎軸稍上揚,上葉不發達,僅見於尾端近處,下葉前部顯著三角形突出,中部低而延續近尾端,與後部間有無缺刻,後部小三角形突出與上葉相連,尾端尖突,後緣凹入。體背側灰褐或黑褐色;腹側淺褐色;腹面白色,且延伸至胸鰭基底上方,為重要的外觀分類特徵。第一背鰭後緣、第二背鰭上部、臀鰭上下部、腹鰭及胸鰭的外角均為淡色。
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棲地

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大洋性大型鯊魚,但時常會出現於岸邊及近海,或大陸棚外,棲息深度可達550公尺。可以利用其長形尾擊昏獵物,主要捕食群游魚類及頭足類。卵胎生,胎兒在子宮內有同種相殘習性,一胎可產下2-4尾幼鯊,剛產下之幼鯊體長可達120-150公分左右。
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Common thresher

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The common thresher (Alopias vulpinus), also known as Atlantic thresher, is the largest species of thresher shark, family Alopiidae, reaching some 6 m (20 ft) in length. About half of its length consists of the elongated upper lobe of its caudal fin. With a streamlined body, short pointed snout, and modestly sized eyes, the common thresher resembles (and has often been confused with) the pelagic thresher (A. pelagicus). It can be distinguished from the latter species by the white of its belly extending in a band over the bases of its pectoral fins. The common thresher is distributed worldwide in tropical and temperate waters, though it prefers cooler temperatures. It can be found both close to shore and in the open ocean, from the surface to a depth of 550 m (1,800 ft). It is seasonally migratory and spends summers at lower latitudes.

The long tail of the common thresher, the source of many fanciful tales through history, is used in a whip-like fashion to deliver incapacitating blows to its prey. This species feeds mainly on small schooling forage fishes such as herrings and anchovies. It is a fast, strong swimmer that has been known to leap clear of the water, and possesses physiological adaptations that allow it to maintain an internal body temperature warmer than that of the surrounding sea water. The common thresher has an aplacental viviparous mode of reproduction, with oophagous embryos that feed on undeveloped eggs ovulated by their mother. Females typically give birth to four pups at a time, following a gestation period of nine months.

Despite its size, the common thresher is minimally dangerous to humans due to its relatively small teeth and timid disposition. It is highly valued by commercial fishers for its meat, fins, hide, and liver oil; large numbers are taken by longline and gillnet fisheries throughout its range. This shark is also esteemed by recreational anglers for the exceptional fight it offers on hook-and-line. The common thresher has a low rate of reproduction and cannot withstand heavy fishing pressure for long, a case in point being the rapid collapse of the thresher shark fishery off California in the 1980s. With commercial exploitation increasing in many parts of the world, the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed this species as vulnerable.

Taxonomy and phylogeny

Early illustration of a common thresher from Natural History of Victoria (1881)

The first scientific description of the common thresher, as Squalus vulpinus, was written by French naturalist Pierre Joseph Bonnaterre in the 1788 Tableau encyclopédique et méthodique des trois règnes de la nature.[5] In 1810, Constantine Samuel Rafinesque described Alopias macrourus from a thresher shark caught off Sicily. Later authors recognized the genus Alopias as valid, while synonymizing A. macrourus with S. vulpinus, thus the common thresher's scientific name became Alopias vulpinus.[3]

The specific epithet vulpinus is derived from the Latin vulpes meaning "fox", and in some older literature the species name was given incorrectly as Alopias vulpes.[6] "Fox shark" is the earliest known English name for this species and is rooted in classical antiquity, from a belief that it was especially cunning. In the mid-19th century, the name "fox" was mostly superseded by "thresher", referencing the shark's flail-like use of its tail. This species is often known simply as thresher shark or thresher; Henry Bigelow and William Schroeder introduced the name "common thresher" in 1945 to differentiate it from the bigeye thresher (A. superciliosus).[7] It is also known by many other common names, including Atlantic thresher, grayfish, green thresher, long-tailed shark, sea ape, sea fox, slasher, swiveltail, thintail thresher, thrasher shark, and whiptail shark.[3][8]

Morphological and allozyme analyses have agreed that the common thresher is basal to the clade formed by the bigeye thresher and the pelagic thresher (A. pelagicus).[3][6] The closest relative of this species within the family may be a fourth, unrecognized thresher shark species off Baja California, reported from allozyme evidence by Blaise Eitner in 1995.[9] However, the existence of this fourth species has yet to be confirmed by other sources.[1][3]

Description

The common thresher can be distinguished from other thresher sharks by the appearance of its head and the coloration above its pectoral fins.
Teeth

The common thresher is a fairly robust shark with a torpedo-shaped trunk and a short, broad head. The dorsal profile of the head curves evenly down to the pointed, conical snout. The eyes are moderately large and lack nictitating membranes. The small mouth is arched and, unlike in other thresher sharks, has furrows at the corners. The species has 32-53 upper and 25-50 lower tooth rows; the teeth are small, triangular, and smooth-edged, lacking lateral cusplets. The five pairs of gill slits are short, with the fourth and fifth pairs located over the pectoral fin bases.[3][6]

The long, falcate (sickle-shaped) pectoral fins taper to narrowly pointed tips. The first dorsal fin is tall and positioned slightly closer to the pectoral fins than the pelvic fins. The pelvic fins are almost as large as the first dorsal fin and bear long, thin claspers in males. The second dorsal and anal fins are tiny, with the former positioned ahead of the latter. Crescent-shaped notches occur on the caudal peduncle at the upper and lower origins of the caudal fin. The upper caudal fin lobe is enormously elongated as is characteristic of threshers, measuring about as long as the rest of the shark; the thin, gently curving lobe is held at a steep upward angle and has a notch in the trailing margin near the tip.[3][7]

The skin is covered by small, overlapping dermal denticles, each with three horizontal ridges and three to five marginal teeth. This species is metallic purplish brown to gray above, becoming more bluish on the flanks. The underside is white, which extends over the pectoral and pelvic fin bases; this pattern is in contrast to the pelagic thresher, which is solidly colored over these fins. The meeting line between the dorsal and ventral coloration is often irregular. A white spot may be seen at the tips of the pectoral fins.[3][7] The common thresher is the largest thresher shark species, commonly reaching 5 m (16 ft) long and 230 kg (510 lb) in weight.[10] The confirmed length record for this shark is 5.7 m (19 ft), while the maximum possible length may be 6.1–6.5 m (20–21 ft).[3] The heaviest individual on record is a 4.8 m (16 ft) female that weighed 510 kg (1,120 lb).[11]

Distribution

The range of the common thresher encompasses tropical and cold-temperate waters worldwide. In the western Atlantic, it is found from Newfoundland to the Gulf of Mexico,[12] though it is rare north of New England, and from Venezuela to Argentina. In the eastern Atlantic, it has been reported from the North Sea and the British Isles to Ghana (including Madeira, the Azores, and the Mediterranean and Black Seas), as well as from Angola to South Africa. In the Indo-Pacific, this species is known from Tanzania to India and the Maldives, Japan, and Korea to southeastern China, Sumatra, eastern Australia, and New Zealand; it also occurs around a number of Pacific islands including New Caledonia, the Society Islands, Tabuaeran, and the Hawaiian Islands. In the eastern Pacific, it has been recorded from British Columbia to Chile, including the Gulf of California.[1][3]

The common thresher is migratory, moving to higher latitudes following warm-water masses. In the eastern Pacific, males travel further than females, reaching as far as Vancouver Island in the late summer and early fall. Juveniles tend to remain in warm nursery areas.[6] In New Zealand waters juveniles can be found over the inner shelf around the North Island and around the upper South Island.[13] Separate populations with different life history characteristics apparently exist in the eastern Pacific and western Indian Ocean and possibly elsewhere; this species is not known to make transoceanic movements.[14] In the northwestern Indian Ocean, males and females segregate by location and depth during the pupping season from January to May.[10] Analysis of mitochondrial DNA has revealed substantial regional genetic variation within common threshers in all three oceans. This could support the idea that sharks from different areas, despite being highly mobile, rarely interbreed.[15]

Habitat

Common threshers are inhabitants of both continental waters and the open ocean. They tend to be most abundant in proximity to land, particularly the juveniles, which frequent near-coastal habitats such as bays.[3] The species has been described as "coastal–oceanic", mostly occurring within 30 km (20 mi) of the coast with considerably lower populations beyond this limit.[16] Most individuals are encountered near the surface, but this species has been recorded to at least a depth of 550 m (1,800 ft).[17] Among eight individuals tagged and tracked for 22–49 hours off southern California, all spent the majority of their time within 40 m (130 ft) of the water surface, but periodically dived much deeper, in five individuals to depths of around 100 m (330 ft) or more.[16] A study from the tropical Marshall Islands indicated that common threshers mainly spend the day at depths of about 160–240 m (520–790 ft) where the temperature is 18–20 °C (64–68 °F).[18] Common threshers appear to prefer water temperatures between 16 and 21 °C (61 and 70 °F), but at least occasionally occur down to around 9 °C (48 °F).[16]

Biology and ecology

Common threshers are active, strong swimmers, with infrequent reports of them leaping completely out of the water.[19] Like the fast-swimming sharks of the family Lamnidae, the common thresher has a strip of aerobic red muscle along its flank that is able to contract powerfully and efficiently for long periods of time.[20] In addition, they have slow-oxidative muscles centrally located within their bodies and a blood vessel countercurrent exchange system called the rete mirabile ("wonderful net"), allowing them to generate and retain body heat. The temperature inside the red muscles of a common thresher averages 2 °C (3.6 °F) above that of the ambient seawater, though significant individual variation is seen.[21] Unlike the pelagic and bigeye threshers, the common thresher lacks an orbital rete mirabile to protect its eyes and brain from temperature changes.[22]

Immature common threshers fall prey to larger sharks. Aside from observations of killer whales feeding on common threshers off New Zealand,[23] adults have no known natural predators. Parasites documented from the common thresher include the protozoan Giardia intestinalis,[24] the trematodes Campula oblonga (not usual host)[25] and Paronatrema vaginicola,[26] the tapeworms Acanthobothrium coronatum,[27] Anthobothrium laciniatum,[28] Crossobothrium angustum,[29] Hepatoxylon trichiuri, Molicola uncinatus,[30] Paraorygmatobothrium exiguum,[31] P. filiforme,[32] and Sphyriocephalus tergetinus,[33] and the copepods Dinemoura discrepans, Echthrogaleus denticulatus,[34] Gangliopus pyriformis,[35] Kroeyerina benzorum,[36] Nemesis aggregatus, N. robusta, N. tiburo,[37] Nesippus orientalis,[38] and Pandarus smithii.[34]

Feeding

The common thresher is often hooked by the tail, because it uses its long caudal fin to attack prey.

The long upper tailfin lobe of the common thresher is used to strike and incapacitate prey.

Some 97% of the common thresher's diet is composed of bony fishes, mostly small schooling forage fish such as mackerel, bluefish, herring, needlefish, and lanternfish. Before striking, the sharks compact schools of prey by swimming around them and splashing the water with their tails, often in pairs or small groups. Threshers are also known to take large, solitary fishes such as lancetfish, as well as squid and other pelagic invertebrates.[17] Off California, common threshers feed mostly on the northern anchovy (Engraulis mordax), with Pacific hake (Merluccius productus), Pacific sardine (Sardinops sagax), Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus), market squid (Loligo opalescens), and pelagic red crab (Pleuroncodes planipes) also being important food items. The sharks concentrate on a few prey species during cold-water years, but become less discriminating during less productive, warmer El Niño periods.[39]

Numerous accounts have been given of common threshers using the long upper lobes of their tail fins to stun prey, and they are often snagged on longlines by their tails after presumably striking at the bait. In July 1914, shark-watcher Russell J. Coles reported seeing a thresher shark use its tail to flip prey fish into its mouth, and that one fish that missed was thrown a "considerable distance". On April 14, 1923, noted oceanographer W.E. Allen observed a 2 m (6.6 ft) thresher shark pursuing a California smelt (Atherinopsis californiensis) off a pier at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The shark overtook the small fish and swung its tail above the water like a "coachwhip" with "confusing speed", severely injuring its target. In the winter of 1865, Irish ichthyologist Harry Blake-Knox claimed to have seen a thresher shark in Dublin Bay use its tail to strike a wounded loon (probably a great northern diver, Gavia immer), which it then swallowed. Blake-Knox's account was subsequently disputed by other authorities, who asserted that the thresher's tail is not rigid or muscular enough to effect such a blow.[10]

Life history

Embryos of the common thresher are nourished by eggs during development.

Like other mackerel sharks, common threshers are aplacental viviparous. They give birth to litters of two to four (rarely six) pups in the eastern Pacific, and three to seven pups in the eastern Atlantic.[14] They are believed to reproduce throughout their range; one known nursery area is the Southern California Bight. Breeding occurs in the summer, usually July or August, and parturition occurs from March to June following a gestation period of nine months. The developing embryos are oophagous, feeding on eggs ovulated by the mother.[6] The teeth of small embryos are peg-like and nonfunctional, being covered by a sheath of soft tissues. As the embryos mature, their series of teeth become progressively more like those of adults in shape, though they remain depressed and hidden until shortly before birth.[40]

Newborn pups usually measure 114–160 cm (3.74–5.25 ft) long and weigh 5–6 kg (11–13 lb), depending on the size of the mother. The juveniles grow about 50 cm (1.6 ft) a year, while adults grow about 10 cm (0.33 ft) a year.[17] The size at maturation appears to vary between populations. In the eastern North Pacific, males mature at 3.3 m (11 ft) and five years old, and females around 2.6–4.5 m (8.5–14.8 ft) and seven years old. They are known to live to at least 15 years and their maximum lifespan has been estimated to be 45–50 years.[6][14]

Relationship with humans

While any large shark is capable of inflicting injury and thus merits respect, the common thresher poses little danger to humans. Most divers report that they are shy and difficult to approach under water. The International Shark Attack File lists a single provoked attack by the thresher shark and four attacks on boats, which were probably incidental from individuals fighting capture.

Commercial fishing

The thresher shark is taken commercially by many countries. Here a common thresher is hooked on a longline

The common thresher is widely caught by offshore longline and pelagic gillnet fisheries, especially in the northwestern Indian Ocean, the western, central, and eastern Pacific, and the North Atlantic. Participating countries include the former USSR, Japan, Taiwan, Spain, the United States, Brazil, Uruguay, and Mexico. The meat is highly prized for human consumption cooked, dried and salted, or smoked. In addition, their skin is made into leather, their liver oil is processed for vitamins, and their fins are used for shark fin soup. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization reported a worldwide common thresher take of 411 metric tons in 2006.[14]

In the United States, a drift gillnet fishery for the common thresher developed in southern California in 1977, beginning with 10 vessels experimenting with a larger-sized mesh. Within two years, the fleet had increased to 40 vessels, and the fishery peaked in 1982 when 228 vessels landed 1,091 metric tons. The common thresher population rapidly collapsed from overfishing, with landings decreasing to less than 300 metric tons a year by the late 1980s and larger size classes disappearing from the population.[14][41] Common threshers are still taken commercially in the United States, with about 85% coming from the Pacific and 15% from the Atlantic. The largest catches remain from the California-Oregon gillnet fishery, which had shifted its focus to the more valuable swordfish (Xiphias gladius), but still takes threshers as bycatch. Small numbers of Pacific threshers are also taken by harpoons, small-mesh driftnets, and longlines. In the Atlantic, threshers are primarily taken on longlines meant for swordfish and tuna.[42][43]

Recreational fishing

Common threshers are well regarded by sports fishers as one of the strongest fighting sharks alongside the shortfin mako shark (Isurus oxyrhinchus), and are ranked as game fish by the International Game Fish Association. They are pursued by anglers using rod and reel off California, South Africa, and elsewhere. Frank Mundus has called thresher sharks "exceedingly stubborn" and "pound for pound, a harder fish to whip" than the mako.[10] Fishing for the common thresher is similar to that for the mako; the recommended equipment is a 24 kg (53 lb) rod and a big-game reel holding at least 365 m (400 yd) of 24 kg (53 lb) line. The ideal method is trolling with baitfish, either deep or allowing it to drift.[44][45]

Conservation

NOAA researchers tagging a common thresher - such efforts are critical for developing conservation measures.

All three thresher shark species were reassessed from Data Deficient to Vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature in 2007.[1] The rapid collapse of the Californian subpopulation (over 50% within three generations) prompted concerns regarding the species' susceptibility to overfishing in other areas, where fishery data are seldom reported and aspects of life history and population structure are little known.[1] In addition to continued fishing pressure, common threshers are also taken as bycatch in other gear such as bottom trawls and fish traps, and are considered a nuisance by mackerel fishers, as they become entangled in the nets.[14][17]

The United States manages common thresher fisheries by regulations such as commercial quotas and trip limits, and recreational minimum sizes and retention limits. Shark finning is illegal under U.S. federal law. The Atlantic common thresher fishery is regulated by the National Marine Fisheries Service Highly Migratory Species Management Division through the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic Highly Migratory Species Fishery Management Plan (FMP), and the Pacific common thresher fishery is regulated by the Pacific Fishery Management Council through the FMP for U.S. West Coast Fisheries for Highly Migratory Species.[42][43] In the 1990s, after the depletion of common thresher stocks by the California gillnet fishery, the fleet was limited to 70 boats and restrictions were placed on season, operation range, and landings. Some evidence shows the California subpopulation is recovering, and the potential population growth rate has been estimated to be 4–7% per year.[41]

In New Zealand, the Department of Conservation has classified the common thresher shark as "Not Threatened" under the New Zealand Threat Classification System.[46]

Historical perceptions

The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384–322 BCE) wrote some of the earliest observations about the common thresher. In his Historia Animalia, he claimed that hooked threshers had a propensity for freeing themselves by biting through fishing lines, and that they protected their young by swallowing them. These "clever" behaviors, which have not been borne out by science, led the ancient Greeks to call it alopex (meaning "fox"), on which its modern scientific name is based.[10]

An oft-repeated myth about the common thresher is that they cooperate with swordfish to attack whales. In one version of events, the thresher shark circles the whale and distracts it by beating the sea to a froth with its tail, thereby allowing the swordfish to impale it in a vulnerable spot with its rostrum. In an alternate account, the swordfish positions itself beneath the whale, while the thresher leaps out of the water and lands on top of the whale, hammering it onto the swordfish's rostrum. Yet other authors describe the thresher "cutting huge gashes" in the side of the whale with its tail. Neither threshers nor swordfish, however, are known to feed on whales or indeed possess the dentition to do so. The story may have arisen from mariners mistaking the tall dorsal fins of killer whales, which do attack large cetaceans, for thresher shark tails. Swordfish bills have also been found embedded in blue and fin whales (likely accidents due to the fast-moving fish's inertia), and thresher sharks do exhibit some of the aforementioned behaviors independent of whales.[10][47]

References

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Common thresher: Brief Summary

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The common thresher (Alopias vulpinus), also known as Atlantic thresher, is the largest species of thresher shark, family Alopiidae, reaching some 6 m (20 ft) in length. About half of its length consists of the elongated upper lobe of its caudal fin. With a streamlined body, short pointed snout, and modestly sized eyes, the common thresher resembles (and has often been confused with) the pelagic thresher (A. pelagicus). It can be distinguished from the latter species by the white of its belly extending in a band over the bases of its pectoral fins. The common thresher is distributed worldwide in tropical and temperate waters, though it prefers cooler temperatures. It can be found both close to shore and in the open ocean, from the surface to a depth of 550 m (1,800 ft). It is seasonally migratory and spends summers at lower latitudes.

The long tail of the common thresher, the source of many fanciful tales through history, is used in a whip-like fashion to deliver incapacitating blows to its prey. This species feeds mainly on small schooling forage fishes such as herrings and anchovies. It is a fast, strong swimmer that has been known to leap clear of the water, and possesses physiological adaptations that allow it to maintain an internal body temperature warmer than that of the surrounding sea water. The common thresher has an aplacental viviparous mode of reproduction, with oophagous embryos that feed on undeveloped eggs ovulated by their mother. Females typically give birth to four pups at a time, following a gestation period of nine months.

Despite its size, the common thresher is minimally dangerous to humans due to its relatively small teeth and timid disposition. It is highly valued by commercial fishers for its meat, fins, hide, and liver oil; large numbers are taken by longline and gillnet fisheries throughout its range. This shark is also esteemed by recreational anglers for the exceptional fight it offers on hook-and-line. The common thresher has a low rate of reproduction and cannot withstand heavy fishing pressure for long, a case in point being the rapid collapse of the thresher shark fishery off California in the 1980s. With commercial exploitation increasing in many parts of the world, the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed this species as vulnerable.

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Description

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Possibly to 609 cm. Also in coastal waters. Eats schooling fish, including mackerels, bluefishes, clupeids, needlefishes, lancetfishes and lanternfishes, also squids, octopi and other pelagic crustaceans, and rarely seabirds. Spatial and depth segregation by sex in northwestern Indian Ocean populations. Uses its long caudal fin to bunch up and even stun schooling prey (Ref. 2850). Unconfirmed boat attacks. Valued for its meat, liver, hide and fins; utilized fresh, dried-salted, smoked and frozen (Ref. 9987).

Reference

Froese, R. & D. Pauly (Editors). (2023). FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication. version (02/2023).

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Diet

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Bluefish, menhaden, shad, mackerel and other schooling fishes, as well as squid

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Distribution

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Newfoundland to Cuba

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Habitat

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warm and temperate areas of all the World's oceans

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Habitat

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nektonic

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Kennedy, Mary [email]