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Lifespan, longevity, and ageing

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Maximum longevity: 29 years (wild) Observations: Record longevity has been reported to be 29 years (http://www.fishbase.org/).
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Benefits

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This species was formerly exploited by the longline fishery in the northwestern Indian Ocean (primarily by the former USSR), but it is also fished in the Central Pacific. It is an important catch off Taiwan (Province of China) with about 222 t landed yearly. Also caught by shark fishermen in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden (R. Bonfil, pers. comm.). Utilized for its meat (for human consumption), liver oil for vitamin-A extraction, hides for leather, and fins for shark-fin soup.Apparently seldom caught by anglers, but listed as a record fish along with other threshers by the International Game Fish Association. It is rarely caught by anti-shark nets off KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Conservation Status : The conservation status of this shark is uncertain, but Liu et al. (1999) considered it extremely vulnerable to overexploitation and in need of close monitoring because of its very low fecundity and relatively high age at maturation.
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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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Primarily an oceanic, epipelagic, circumtropical species, but sometimes caught near shore on beaches with a narrow continental shelf,ranging in depth from the surface to at least 152 m. Sometimes seen by divers near coral reefs, near dropoffs and in large lagoons, and on sea mounts. A little-known, active, strong-swimming species, probably migratory but with movements little-known. In the eastern North Pacific there is a possible population centre off central Baja California, which tends to shift northward (along with other oceanic sharks) during strong El Niño events.Behaviour and sociobiology is poorly known. Michael (1993) has seen this species repeatedly leap (breach) out of the water. Ovoviviparous, with uterine cannibalism as in other species of Alopias. Embryos subsist on their yolk-sacs up to about 12 cm, after which they become oophagous, feeding on unfertilized eggs. No evidence of adelphophagy (embryo-eating) was reported by Liu et al. (1999), who examined 233 embryos from 167 pregnant females. Litter size is two, with one foetus per uterus and with sex ratio 1:1. Gestation period uncertain because females give birth all year long without a definite birth season. Liu et al. suggest that the gestation period may be less than a year as with A. vulpinus, but because most adult females were pregnant throughout the year there may be an annual cycle with no resting period between pregnancies. Pupping may also occur in winter in the Gulf of Aden (R. Bonfil, pers. comm.). This species presumably feeds on small fishes and squid but no details are known. Vertebral growth rings are laid annually in vertebral centra; females mature at about 8 or 9 years old and males at about 6 to 9 years old, with up to 16 growth rings for females and 14 for males for a minimal age of 14 to 16 years old and a maximum age estimated from von Bertalanffy growth curves as 20 years for males and 29 years for females. Assuming birth of two young every year a female might produce about 40 young during her lifetime. This species has unusually large young, with the largest known foetus 43% of the length of the largest adult female. The large size of the young may help to reduce postnatal predation (presumably by other large sharks), but the relatively small size of the adults combined with the low fecundity imposed by large foetal size may in turn require annual breeding.
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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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Maximum total length at least 365 cm. Size at birth uncertain but presumably between about 130 and 160 cm and possibly up to 190 cm. The largest term foetus examined by Liu et al. (1999) off Taiwan (Province of China) was 158 cm and their smallest specimen was 190 cm long and a year old; a freeliving specimen from the western Indian Ocean that was examined by the author was 137 cm long. A term or near-term foetus 96.5 cm long attributed to this species by Nakamura (1935) is probably Alopias vulpinus. Off Taiwan (Province of China) males were immature at about 174 to 283 cm, adolescent at about 239 to 305 cm, and adult at 259 to 323 cm; onset of maturity was at about 267 cm, with 50% mature at 267 to 276 cm. Females from Taiwan (Province of China) were immature at 176 to 294 cm, adolescent at 253 to 321 cm, and adult at 265 to about 365 cm; onset of maturity was at about 273 cm, with 50% mature at 282 to 292 cm. Elsewhere males were adolescent at 192 to 318 cm and adult at 276 cm, while females were immature or adolescent at 277 to 233 cm, adult at 264 to 330 cm, while pregnant females were 264 to about 300 cm. This is apparently a smaller species than Alopias superciliosus or A. vulpinus. Length-weight equations are given by Liu et al. (1999) for Taiwanese specimens: Females: W(kg) = 4.61 x 10-5 TL(cm)2.494 (n = 230) Males: W(kg) = 3.98 x 10-5 TL(cm)2.52 (n = 230)
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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 wide-ranging in the Indo-Pacific. Indian Ocean: South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal), Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, Arabian Sea (off Somalia, between Oman and India, and off Pakistan), Australia (northwest Western Australia), Western North Pacific: China, Taiwan (Province of China), Japan (southeastern Honshu). Western South Pacific: New Caledonia, eastern Micronesia, Tahiti. Central Pacific: Hawaiian Islands, equatorial waters north of Howland and Baker, Phoenix and Palmyra Islands. Eastern Pacific: USA (California) and Mexico (Baja California, Gulf of California), equatorial waters northwest of French Polynesia, and off Galapagos Islands.
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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

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fieldmarks: Long upper caudal lobe nearly as long as rest of shark, relatively small eyes, very narrow head with arched dorsal profile, straight broad-tipped 'oceanic' pectoral fins, first dorsal fin somewhat closer to pectoral-fin bases than pelvic-fin bases, very slender caudal-fin tip, body colour deep blue or grey above, white below, white colour of abdomen not extending over pectoral-fin bases. Head narrow in dorsal and ventral views, with a convex, arched dorsolateral profile. Snout moderately long, conical. Eyes moderately large in adults but very large in newborn and foetuses, not expanded onto dorsal surface of head and without a vertical, binocular field of view; interorbital space broadly convex. Labial furrows absent. Teeth very small, in 41 to 45/37 to 38 rows (total for both jaws 75 to 86 rows); posterior tooth rows 5 to 11; symphysial and intermediate tooth rows usually present. Weak nuchal grooves present above branchial region. Pectoral fins of "macroceanic" type with straight and very broad tips. Claspers moderately slender and not whip-like. First dorsal-fin midbase about equidistant between pectoral and pelvic-fin bases or closer to pectoral-fin bases. Caudal tip very slender with very narrow terminal lobe. Ribs of monospondylous precaudal vertebrae fused ventrally to form a canal extending nearly to the occiput. Total vertebral count 453 to 477. Intestinal valve count 37 to 40. Body deep blue to grey on upper surface with sides silvery and underside white, white colour of abdomen not extending over pectoral-fin bases; no white dot on upper pectoral-fin tips.

References

  • Compagno, 1984, 1990a, b
  • Faughnan, 1980
  • Fourmanoir & Laboute, 1976
  • Gohar & Mazhar, 1964
  • Hanan, AuHolts & Coan, 1993
  • J. Crow (pers. comm.)
  • Johnson, 1978
  • Liu et al., 1999.
  • Nakamura, 1935
  • Otakea & Mizue, 1981
  • S.P. Applegate (pers. comm.)
  • Villavicencio-Garaysar, Estrada-Agüero & Downton-Hoffman, 1997

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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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Morphology

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Dorsal spines (total): 0; Dorsal soft rays (total): 0; Analspines: 0; Analsoft rays: 0
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Cristina V. Garilao
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Trophic Strategy

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A carnivore (Ref. 9137). A pelagic species occasionally advancing into coastal waters (Ref. 9137).
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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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Life Cycle

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Exhibit ovoviparity (aplacental viviparity), with embryos feeding on other ova produced by the mother (oophagy) after the yolk sac is absorbed (Ref. 50449, 42326). Usually with at least two young (Ref. 6871). Size at birth about 100 cm (Ref. 6871); 130-160 cm TL (Ref. 58048). Distinct pairing with embrace (Ref. 205).
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Diagnostic Description

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A small thresher with moderately large eyes, a broadly convex forehead, a very narrow caudal tip, and straight, broad-tipped pectoral fins (Ref. 5578). Upper lobe of caudal fin very long and strap-like, almost equal to length of rest of shark; lower lobe short but strong; terminal lobe very small (Ref. 13570). Dark blue on back and sides, underside white; no white patch over pectoral fin bases (Ref. 5578).
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Biology

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Primarily an oceanic species but sometimes close inshore (Ref. 247, 5578, 58302); neritic to oceanic, 0-152 m (Ref. 11230). Epipelagic (Ref. 58302). Mesopelagic in the tropics; may enter atoll lagoons (Ref. 37816). Stuns its prey with its tail, presumably feeding on small fishes and cephalopods (Ref. 6871). Ovoviviparous, embryos feeding on yolk sac and other ova produced by the mother (Ref. 43278, 50449). Sometimes caught by ski-boat anglers (Ref. 5578). Utilized for human consumption, liver oil for vitamin extraction, hides for leather, and fins for shark-fin soup (Ref. 13570). A very common catch in the tuna and shark longline, and tuna drift net fisheries (Ref.58048). Maximum and common size of males estimated from discussion in Ref. 247. Adult females may reach at least 330 cm TL (Ref. 47613).
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Importance

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fisheries: commercial; gamefish: yes
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分布

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分布於印度-太平洋區,西起紅海、東非洲,東至加拉巴哥群島、加州灣,北至日本,南至澳洲、新加勒多尼亞。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

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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。眼大,圓形,無瞬膜。前鼻瓣短呈三角形;無唇溝或觸鬚。口弧形,下頜極短,口閉時不露齒;齒小,中齒頭斜三角形,向外傾斜,外側具1-2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,起點於體中部或稍後,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,起點於腹鰭末緣的上方,後緣斜直,上角圓,下角微尖突;胸鰭末緣直而略寬圓;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,但不延伸至胸鰭基底。背鰭、尾鰭下葉、腹鰭及胸鰭具黑褐色的邊緣。
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棲地

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大洋性大型鯊魚,但有時會出現於近海。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,一胎可產下至少2尾幼鯊,剛產下之幼鯊體長可達96公分左右。
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Pelagic thresher

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The pelagic thresher (Alopias pelagicus) is a species of thresher shark, family Alopiidae; this group of sharks is characterized by the greatly elongated upper lobes of their caudal fins. The pelagic thresher occurs in the tropical and subtropical waters of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, usually far from shore, but occasionally entering coastal habitats. It is often confused with the common thresher (A. vulpinus), even in professional publications, but can be distinguished by the dark, rather than white, color over the bases of its pectoral fins. The smallest of the three thresher species, the pelagic thresher typically measures 3 m (10 ft) long.

The diet of the pelagic thresher consists mainly of small midwater fishes, which are stunned with whip-like strikes of its tail. Along with all other mackerel sharks, the pelagic thresher exhibits ovoviviparity and usually gives birth to litters of two. The developing embryos are oophagous, feeding on unfertilized eggs produced by the mother. The young are born unusually large, up to 43% the length of the mother. Pelagic threshers are valued by commercial fisheries for their meat, skin, liver oil, and fins, and are also pursued by sport fishers. The International Union for Conservation of Nature assessed this species as endangered in 2019.

Taxonomy and phylogeny

The pelagic thresher was originally described by Japanese ichthyologist Hiroshi Nakamura on the basis of three large specimens, none of which was designated a type specimen. He illustrated one of the three specimens in his paper, "On the two species of the thresher shark from Formosan waters", published in August 1935. Nakamura also separately illustrated and described a fetus, that Leonard Compagno later concluded was probably of a common thresher. Several authors, including Gohar and Mazhar (1964, Red Sea), Kato, Springer and Wagner (1967, Eastern Pacific), Fourmanoir and Laboute (1976, New Caledonia), Johnson (1978, Tahiti), and Faughnan (1980, Hawaiian Islands) have published illustrations of "common threshers" that were in fact pelagic threshers.[3]

An allozyme analysis conducted by Blaise Eitner in 1995 showed that the closest relative of the pelagic thresher is the bigeye thresher (A. superciliosus), with which it forms a clade.[4] The specific epithet pelagicus is from the Greek pelagios, meaning "of the sea". Another common name is the smalltooth thresher.[5]

Distribution and habitat

Due to confusion with the common thresher, the distribution of the pelagic thresher may be wider than is currently known. It ranges extensively in the Indo-Pacific, with scattered records from South Africa, the Red Sea, and the Arabian Sea (off Somalia, between Oman and India, and off Pakistan), to China, southeastern Japan, northwestern Australia, New Caledonia, and Tahiti, to the Hawaiian Islands, California, and the Galapagos Islands.[3] The North Pacific population shifts northward during warm El Nino years.[6] Analysis of mitochondrial DNA has shown extensive gene flow within the eastern and western Pacific pelagic thresher populations, but little flow between them.[7]

The pelagic thresher primarily inhabits the open ocean, occurring from the surface to a depth of at least 150 m (492 ft).[5] However, it occasionally comes close to shore in regions with a narrow continental shelf, and has been observed near coral reef dropoffs or seamounts in the Red Sea and the Gulf of California, and off Indonesia and Micronesia. It has also been known to enter large lagoons in the Tuamotu Islands.[8]

Description

The pelagic thresher is the smallest of the thresher sharks, typically 3 m (10 ft) in length and 69.5 kg (153.3 lb) in weight, and usually not exceeding 3.3 m (10.8 ft) and 88.4 kg (194.9 lb).[5] Males and females attain known maximum lengths of 3.5 m (11.5 ft) and 3.8 m (12.5 ft), respectively.[9] A record of 5 m (16.4 ft) is dubious and may have resulted from confusion with other thresher species. This species has a fusiform body (wide in the middle and tapered at the ends) and a very slender upper caudal fin lobe nearly as long as the rest of the shark. The pectoral fins are long and straight with broad, rounded tips. The first dorsal fin is placed halfway between the pectoral and pelvic fins, and is of comparable size to the pelvic fins. The second dorsal and anal fins are tiny.[3]

The head is narrow with a short, conical snout and a distinctive "pinched" profile when viewed from below. The eyes are very large in juveniles and decrease in relative size with age. No furrows occur at the corners of the mouth. The teeth are very small, numbering 21–22 rows on each side with a symphysial (central) row in the upper jaw and 21 on each side without a symphysial row in the lower jaw. Five to 11 rows of posterior teeth are present. The teeth are smooth-edged, with oblique cusps and lateral cusplets on the outside margins.[3][5] The body is covered with very small, smooth dermal denticles with flat crowns and cusps with parallel ridges. The coloration is an intense dark blue above and white below; the white does not extend to above the pectoral fins. The color rapidly fades to gray after death. The dark pigment above the pectoral fins, the rounded pectoral fin tips, and the absence of labial furrows separate this shark from the common thresher.[5][6]

Biology and ecology

A male pelagic thresher being attended by cleaner fish
A pelagic thresher using tail slaps to hunt sardines

The pelagic thresher is an active, strong swimmer and has been known to leap clear of the water (five times in a row on one documented occasion).[8] Predators of the pelagic thresher include larger fishes (including other sharks) and toothed whales. Known parasites of this species include the tapeworms Litobothrium amplifica, L. daileyi, and L. nickoli, which inhabit the shark's spiral valve intestine,[5] and copepods of the genus Echthrogaleus, which infest the skin. At Malapascua Island in the Philippines, pelagic threshers have been observed regularly visiting cleaning stations occupied by cleaner wrasses (Labroides dimidiatus and Thalassoma lunare), during which they exhibit characteristic behaviors to facilitate the cleaning interaction. These visits occur more frequently early in the morning, and may be why these normally oceanic sharks are sometimes encountered in shallow water.[10]

Feeding

Little information is available on the feeding ecology of the pelagic thresher. Its very slender tail and fine dentition suggest an exclusive diet of small, pelagic prey.[3] Analysis of stomach contents reveals that pelagic threshers feed mainly on barracudinas, lightfishes, and escolars, all inhabitants of the mesopelagic zone. Therefore, little competition occurs between the pelagic thresher and other large oceanic piscivores such as billfishes, tunas, and dolphinfishes, which tend to feed near the surface.[11] As in other threshers, pelagic threshers may swim in circles to drive schooling prey into a compact mass, before striking them sharply with the upper lobe of their tails to stun them. Because of this behavior, pelagic threshers are often hooked on longlines by their tails.[5]

Life history

Like the rest of the mackerel sharks, the pelagic thresher is ovoviviparous. It gives birth to two pups at a time (rarely just one), one per uterus. With no defined breeding season, most adult females are pregnant throughout the year; the gestation period is uncertain, but has been suggested to be less than one year as in the common thresher. The developing embryos are sustained by a yolk sac until they are 12 cm (4.7 in) long, after which they are oophagous and feed on egg capsules produced by the mother. Each capsule measures about 55 mm (2.2 in) long and 12 mm (0.5 in) across, and contains 20–30 ova.[12] Early-stage embryos have specialized teeth for opening the capsules, while later-stage embryos have their teeth hidden and swallow the capsules whole, their teeth not becoming functional again until just after birth. No evidence of sibling cannibalism has been found as in the sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus).[13] Young pelagic threshers are born unusually large, up to 1.6 m (5.2 ft) long or 43% the length of the mother, which likely reduces predation on the newborns.[3]

The growth rate of pelagic threshers slows with age: 9 cm/year for ages 0–1, 8 cm/year for ages 2–3, 6 cm/year for ages 5–6, 4 cm/year for ages 7–10, 3 cm/year for ages 10–12, and 2 cm/year for ages 13 and greater.[5] Females reach maturity at 2.8–2.9 m (9.2–9.5 ft) long and eight to nine years old, while males mature at 2.7–2.8 m (8.9–9.2 ft) long and seven to eight years old. The oldest confirmed ages for females and males are 16 and 14 years, respectively. Extrapolating the growth curves to the largest known individuals suggests that females may have a lifespan exceeding 28 years, and males 17 years.[13] A single female produces about 40 young over her entire life.[6]

Thermoregulation

Anatomical examination indicates that the pelagic thresher is unlikely to be warm-bodied like the common thresher; it lacks a rete mirabile, a blood vessel countercurrent exchange system that prevents metabolic heat from being dissipated into the water, inside its trunk. Furthermore, its aerobic red muscles, responsible for generating heat in the common thresher, are positioned in two lateral strips just beneath the skin rather than at the core of the body.[14] A rete system is present around the pelagic thresher's brain and eyes, albeit less developed than in the bigeye thresher, which may serve to buffer those organs against temperature changes.[15]

Human interactions

Pelagic threshers are often caught as bycatch on longlines.

The pelagic thresher has never been implicated in an attack on humans; it has small jaws and teeth for its size and tends to flee from divers.[8] This shark is taken by commercial fisheries in the central Pacific and western Indian Oceans, as well as off California and Mexico. Abundant off northeastern Taiwan, it comprises over 12% (about 3,100 fish, 220 metric tons) of the annual Taiwanese shark landings. The meat is sold for human consumption, the skin is made into leather, and the fins are used for shark fin soup in Asia. The squalene oil in the liver of the pelagic thresher can comprise 10% of its weight, and is used in the manufacture of cosmetics, health foods, and high-grade machine oil.[5]

Though rarely caught, pelagic threshers are also valued by sport fishers and are listed as game fish by the International Game Fish Association. The largest overall records are from New Zealand, while the light tackle records are from California.[5] Pelagic threshers are frequently taken as bycatch on longlines and in driftnets meant for other species such as tuna, and also rarely in gillnets and antishark nets.[5]

References

  1. ^ Rigby, C.L.; Barreto, R.; Carlson, J.; Fernando, D.; Fordham, S.; Francis, M.P.; Herman, K.; Jabado, R.W.; Liu, K.M.; Marshall, A.; Pacoureau, N.; Romanov, E.; Sherley, R.B.; Winker, H. (2019). "Alopias pelagicus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T161597A68607857. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T161597A68607857.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Compagno, L.J.V. (2002). Sharks of the World: An Annotated and Illustrated Catalogue of Shark Species Known to Date. Vol. 2. Rome: Food and Agricultural Organization. pp. 81–83. ISBN 92-5-104543-7.
  4. ^ Eitner, B.J. (Aug 18, 1995). "Systematics of the Genus Alopias (Lamniformes: Alopiidae) with Evidence for the Existence of an Unrecognized Species". Copeia. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. 1995 (3): 562–571. doi:10.2307/1446753. JSTOR 1446753.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Seitz, J.C. Pelagic Thresher. Florida Museum of Natural History. Retrieved on December 22, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c Ebert, D.A. (2003). Sharks, Rays, and Chimaeras of California. London: University of California Press. pp. 101–102. ISBN 0-520-23484-7.
  7. ^ Trejo, T. (2005). "Global phylogeography of thresher sharks (Alopias spp.) inferred from mitochondrial DNA control region sequences". M.Sc. thesis. Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, California State University.
  8. ^ a b c Martin, R.A. Biology of the Pelagic Thresher (Alopias pelagicus). ReefQuest Centre for Shark Research. Retrieved on December 22, 2008.
  9. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2008). "Alopias pelagicus" in FishBase. December 2008 version.
  10. ^ Oiver, S. (2005). The behaviour of pelagic thresher sharks (Alopias pelagicus) in relation to cleaning fish (Labroides dimidiatus & Thalasoma lunare) on Monad shoal, Malapascua Island, Cebu, Philippines. MSc Thesis, University of Wales, Bangor.
  11. ^ Moteki, M.; Arai, M.; Tsuchiya, K. & Okamoto, H. (2001). "Composition of piscine prey in the diet of large pelagic fish in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean". Fisheries Science. 67 (6): 1063–1074. doi:10.1046/j.1444-2906.2001.00362.x.
  12. ^ Otake, T. & Mizue, K. (1981). "Direct Evidence for Oophagy in Thresher Shark, Alopias pelagicus". Japanese Journal of Ichthyology. 28 (2): 171–172.
  13. ^ a b Liu, K.M.; Chen, C.T.; Liao, T.H. & Joung, S.J. (February 1999). "Age, Growth, and Reproduction of the Pelagic Thresher Shark, Alopias pelagicus in the Northwestern Pacific". Copeia. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. 1999 (1): 68–74. doi:10.2307/1447386. JSTOR 1447386.
  14. ^ Sepulveda, C.A.; Wegner, N.C.; Bernal, D. & Graham, J.B. (2005). "The red muscle morphology of the thresher sharks (family Alopiidae)". Journal of Experimental Biology. 208 (Pt 22): 4255–4261. doi:10.1242/jeb.01898. PMID 16272248.
  15. ^ Weng, K.C. & Block, B.A. (2004). "Diel vertical migration of the bigeye thresher shark (Alopias superciliosus), a species possessing orbital retia mirabilia". Fishery Bulletin – National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. 102 (1): 221–229.

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Pelagic thresher: Brief Summary

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The pelagic thresher (Alopias pelagicus) is a species of thresher shark, family Alopiidae; this group of sharks is characterized by the greatly elongated upper lobes of their caudal fins. The pelagic thresher occurs in the tropical and subtropical waters of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, usually far from shore, but occasionally entering coastal habitats. It is often confused with the common thresher (A. vulpinus), even in professional publications, but can be distinguished by the dark, rather than white, color over the bases of its pectoral fins. The smallest of the three thresher species, the pelagic thresher typically measures 3 m (10 ft) long.

The diet of the pelagic thresher consists mainly of small midwater fishes, which are stunned with whip-like strikes of its tail. Along with all other mackerel sharks, the pelagic thresher exhibits ovoviviparity and usually gives birth to litters of two. The developing embryos are oophagous, feeding on unfertilized eggs produced by the mother. The young are born unusually large, up to 43% the length of the mother. Pelagic threshers are valued by commercial fisheries for their meat, skin, liver oil, and fins, and are also pursued by sport fishers. The International Union for Conservation of Nature assessed this species as endangered in 2019.

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Description

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Primarily an oceanic and epipelagic species; usually mesopelagic in the tropics (Ref. 1602). Also inhabits relatively cool waters below 300 m and may enter lagoons. Makes use of their tail to aggregate, then stun the small fishes on which they feed (Ref. 1602). Squids may also be included in the diet. Ovoviviparous, with at least two young. Utilized for human consumption, liver oil for vitamin extraction, hides for leather, and fins for shark-fin soup.

Reference

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

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