Tuesday, 15 January 2013

How Big Is A Tiger Shark

Source (google.com.pk)
How Big Is A Tiger Shark Biography

LOCAL surfers fear a large tiger shark has adopted the bays of the Noosa National Park as part of its territory after two confirmed late-afternoon sightings in the past week.
Car salesman Simon Murray, a surfer and regular point-to-point swimmer in the national park, said he had been out at Granite Bay around 6pm last Friday when his nephew and a former Sydney professional lifeguard saw a very large fin slice through the water near where they were surfing.
The pair yelled to him and they left the water immediately.
"I saw an older fellow scrambling up on to the rocks and at first thought it was a tourist who didn't know where to come in,'' Mr Murray said.
"I paddled in at Winch Cove. My nephew said he couldn't believe how close it had come.
"It was bloody massive ... huge."
>> Bull sharks in Sunshine Coast rivers
The following afternoon Mr Murray returned to Granite Bay where he stopped another surfer to warn him of the sighting.
"He said he had seen a big shark two weeks before with a dorsal fin that was as high as his knee,'' Mr Murray said.
"Tiger sharks are territorial. This one may be working an area between the bay and the Jew Shoals.
Dr Jonathan Werry, of Ocean and Coast Research, who is tracking bull sharks and other large sharks in a project supported by the Queensland Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, said the animal sighted by the surfers was more likely a great white, hammerhead or large dusky shark.
Dr Werry is tracking two tiger sharks, one 3.9m and the other 5m, which had much smaller dorsal fins.
With only the description as a guide he thinks it most likely to be a large dusky shark of more than four metres in length. Dusky sharks are potentially dangerous but few attacks on humans have been attributed to them.

Whatever the species, the sightings are cause for concern for Mr Murray, who competes in Noosa point swims and sometimes swims out to Granite alone.
"People just need to be aware that if they go out surfing at that time of day (late afternoon) that there is a very big shark about," he said.

Queensland Shark Control Program manager Jeff Krause agrees.
He said swimmers or surfers should not be in the water after dusk, at night or before dawn when sharks were most active.
"People should be discerning when choosing where and when they swim,'' Mr Krause said. "Sharks are a natural part of the marine environment and when we enter the water we are entering their domain.
"Any size shark can cause serious injury or death to people. However sharks more than 2m long are particularly dangerous and could cause fatal injuries."
Shark control gear is in place on 23 beaches on the Sunshine Coast, including 11 nets and 78 drumlines.
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark
How Big Is A Tiger Shark

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