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Boatsales Staff10 Feb 2018
NEWS

How many white sharks in Australia now?

The CSIRO says there could be more than 15,000 white sharks on the East and West Coasts, with rebounding juvenile numbers making up the bulk of the population

How many white sharks are there in Australia. The CSIRO has been trying to get to the bottom of the important question, while state bodies like NSW Fisheries continue their own crucial NSW white shark tagging research and anecdotal evidence from anglers points to more and more white shark encounters, such as with this 200kg white shark jumping into a boat off Forster on the NSW North Coast.

Juvenile white shark encounters are definitely more frequent in places like Port Stephens in Northern NSW, where breeding aggregations have be found ranging from Stockton Beach to Fingal Head and inside the estuary itself. These fish often following the migrating Australian salmon and sea mullet schools, along with a lot of other big sharks.

The CSIRO has determined that Australia has two white shark populations — an eastern population ranging east of Wilson's Promontory, Victoria, to central Queensland and across to New Zealand; and a southern-western population ranging west of Wilson's Promontory to north-western Western Australia.

CSIRO research indicates that there are about 750 adults in the eastern Australasian white shark population (with a range from 470 to 1030), and about double that number in the southern-western population.

The research also reveals the total number of white sharks in the eastern population is 5460, with a potential range between 2909 and 12,802.

The total population could not be calculated for the southern-western population.

This latest CSIRO research has also provided important details on adult survival rates, which were very high in the eastern population, in the range of 90 per cent and above.

HIGH SURVIVAL RATES FOR WHITE SHARKS
This means that for 100 sharks alive this year, 90 would be expected to be alive next year.

For the southern-western population, the 2017 estimate is 1460 adult white sharks with a range of 760 and 2250.

The adult survival rate is also estimated at above 90 per cent.

Until now, information about adult white sharks has been elusive, because adults are very difficult to sample, particularly on the east coast.

Thanks to a breakthrough in genetic and statistical methods, this problem has now been solved.

THE DNA BREAKTHROUGH
The breakthrough means scientists have been able to estimate adult shark numbers without having to catch or even see any adult white sharks.

Instead, they located the tell-tale marks of the parents in the DNA collected from juveniles.

Looking for brothers and sisters among juvenile white sharks has provided the final pieces of information needed to estimate the size of populations in Australian waters.

For the eastern population, researchers analysed DNA from 214 juveniles to find the genetic 'marks' of both parents.

More than 70 individuals were found to share a parent, and this number has a statistical relationship to the total size of the adult population.

"The chances of any two juveniles in a population sharing a parent depends on how many adults are around to share the job of reproduction," lead author of the paper, Dr Richard Hillary of CSIRO said.

"In a small population, more juveniles share a parent than in a large population, and vice versa.

"And as more juveniles are sampled over time, the parental marks we detect also reveal patterns of adult survival, which we determined to be greater than 90 per cent in the east.

"We found many cases of parents (both male and female) that apparently had survived 20 or more years between the births of their children."

SW POPULATION
In the southern-western population, DNA samples were collected from 175 sub-adult and young adult males from Geraldton in WA to western Victoria.

From these 175 samples, 27 were found to be half-sibling pairs (shared one parent).

A total population estimate has not yet been compiled for the southern-western population because direct estimates of juvenile survival rates (a crucial piece of information obtained by tagging a relatively high number of juvenile sharks) are not available.

CISRO SAY POPULATION STABLE
Adult populations for both the eastern and southern-western populations were estimated to have been stable since the onset of white shark protection (at the end of the 1990s).

This is consistent with the long time it would take for the effects of the various control programs and levels of fishing that existed pre-protection (which focused mostly on juveniles) to flow through to the adult population.

Sharks take 12–15 years to become mature adults, so we wouldn't expect to see the effect on the adult population of that reduction in juvenile shark mortality until the next few years.

Estimating the trend in total population size for both populations requires continued teamwork, sampling and analyses, using methods and institutional relationships developed in this project.

"Now that we have a starting point, we can repeat the exercise over time and build a total population trend, to see whether the numbers are going up or down," Dr Hillary said.

"This is crucial to developing effective policy outcomes that balance the sometimes conflicting aims of conservation initiatives and human-shark interaction risk management."

Details of the research methods and sampling, in the context of the eastern Australasian white shark population, are now published in Scientific Reports.

A report detailing further research and providing the latest population estimates has also been published today by the National Environmental Science Program's Marine Biodiversity Hub

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