List of megamouth shark specimens and sightings

This list of megamouth shark specimens and sightings includes recorded human encounters with Megachasma pelagios, popularly known as the megamouth shark. A similar list is published by the Ichthyology Department of the Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida.[1]

Specimen #7 deposited at Marine World Uminonakamichi, Japan
Specimen #37 exhibited at Aburatsubo Marine Park, Japan

List of megamouth sharks

Records are listed chronologically in ascending order and numbered accordingly.

  • Date – Date on which the specimen was first captured, found, or observed.
  • Location – Area where the specimen was found.
  • Sex – Sex and sexual maturity of the specimen.
  • Size – Data relating to measurements. Abbreviations used are based on standardised acronyms in ichthyology (see Measurements).
  • Method of capture – Circumstances in which the specimen was recovered or observed.
  • Disposition – Repository or otherwise fate of the specimen.
  • References – Primary sources for each specimen as well as later publications that refer to the specimen.
  • Notes – Miscellaneous information.
#DateLocationSexSizeMethod of captureDispositionReferencesNotes
115 November 197625 miles (40 km) off Kāne'ohe, Oahu, Hawaii (21°51′N 157°46′W)MaleTL: 4.46 m; PCL: 3.091 m (69.3% TL); WT: 750 kgBecame entangled in the sea anchor of a United States Navy shipDeposited at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop MuseumDunford (1976); Taylor (1977); Cressey & Boyle (1978); Johnson (1978); Taylor et al. (1983); [Anonymous] (1983a, b, c, d, e, f); Maisey (1985); Wood (1986); Gallagher (N.d.)Holotype and first recorded specimen. First examined by Leighton Taylor, who dubbed it "megamouth".
229 November 1984Catalina Island, CaliforniaMaleTL: 4.49 m"Caught"Deposited at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County[Anonymous] (1984a, b); Lavenberg & Seigel (1985); Diamond (1985); Maisey (1985); Wood (1986)
318 August 1988Mandurah, Western AustraliaMaleTL: 5.15 m; PCL: 3.43 m (66.6% TL)Found washed ashoreDeposited at Western Australian MuseumBerra & Hutchins (1988); [Anonymous] (1988a, b); Nielsen (1988); Berra & Hutchins (1990); Berra & Hutchins (1991)
423 January 1989Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, JapanMaleTL: 4+ mFound washed ashoreDiscardedNakaya (1989a); Nakaya (1989b)
5June 1989Yaizu, Shizuoka, JapanFemale?TL: ~4.9 mCaught in netReleased aliveMiya et al. (1992); Mollet (2012)Most likely a female according to John Morrissey.
621 October 1990Dana Point, CaliforniaMaleTL: 4.94 mFound entangled in a drift gillnetTrackedHaight (1990a); Haight (1990b); [Anonymous] (1990a, b, c, d); [Anonymous] (1991a, b); Lavenberg (1991); Nelson et al. (1997)Specimen was taken alive, then fitted with two ultrasonic transmitters and tracked for two days. The shark was observed to move close to the surface at night and deeper during the day.
729 November 1994Hakata Bay, Fukuoka, Japan (34°40′N 130°50′E)Immature femaleTL: 4.71 m; PCL: 3.136 m (66.6% TL)"Stranded"Deposited at Marine World Uminonakamichi (Fukuoka, Japan)Castro (1994); Takada (1994); Takada (1995); Clark & Castro (1995); Castro et al. (1997); Nakaya et al. (1997); Takada et al. (1997); Tanaka & Yano (1997); Yabumoto et al. (1997); Yamaguchi & Nakaya (1997); Yano et al. (1997a); Yano et al. (1997b); Yano et al. (1997c); Goto (1999)First confirmed female; much studied. Numerous papers on this specimen were published in Biology of the Megamouth Shark (1997).
84 May 199540 miles (64 km) off Dakar, Senegal (15°08′N 18°22′W)Immature maleTL: ~1.8 mCaught in purse seine of French tuna fishing shipDiscardedSéret (1995)First recorded specimen from the Atlantic Ocean and smallest known specimen at the time.
918 September 1995southern BrazilImmature maleTL: 1.9 m; WT: 24.4 kgCaught by commercial longline vesselDeposited at Instituto de Pesca in São Paulo, BrazilCastro & Gadig (1995); Amorim et al. (1995); Amorim et al. (2000)
1030 April 199712 miles (19 km) south of Mikizaki, Owase, Mie, Japan (33°44′N 136°16′E) at 150 m depthFemaleTL: 5.44 m; WT: 1,040 kgCaught by fishermenDeposited at Toba AquariumYano et al. (1997d); Ito et al. (1999)External brain form and cranial nerves studied in detail.
1120 February 1998Macajalar Bay, Cagayan de Oro, PhilippinesMaleTL: ~5.49 mCaught by three fishermenConsumedBaldo & Elizaga (1998); Elizaga (1998a); Elizaga (1998b); Reyes (1998); Morrissey & Elizaga (1999); Amorim et al. (2000)
1223 April 1998Atawa, Mie, JapanFemaleTL: 5.2–5.49 m"Captured"DiscardedYano et al. (1998); Amorim et al. (2000); Burgess (N.d.)
1330 August 1998Manado, North Sulawesi, Indonesia
(1°46′0″N 124°50′3″E)
Female?TL: ~5 mObserved being attacked by sperm whalesSwam awayPecchioni & Benoldi (1999); Amorim et al. (2000)
141 October 199930 miles (48 km) west of San Diego, CaliforniaFemaleTL: ~17 ft (5.2 m)Caught in a drift gillnetReleased alive in good conditionPetersen (1999)Four colour photographs taken. Water temperature was 67.2 °F (19.56 °C).
1519 October 200142 miles (68 km) northwest of San Diego, CaliforniaMaleTL: ~18 ft (5.5 m)Caught in a drift gillnetReleased alive in good conditionPetersen (2001)Tissue biopsy collected. Water temperature was 65.8 °F (18.78 °C).
1618 January 2002eastern Indian Ocean (2°17.9′S 88°12.7′E) at 150 m depthImmature maleTL: 2.35 m; WT(estimate): >120 kgCaught in tuna purse seineDiscardedBoonyapiwat & Vidthayanon (2002)Caught by M/V Seafdec. Sea surface temperature was 26.8 °C.
1720 April 2002Nature's Valley near Plettenberg Bay, approximately 400 km east of Cape Town, South Africa (33°59′S 23°34′E)FemaleTL: 3.5 m; WT: 300 kgFound washed ashoreDeposited at Port Elizabeth Museum[Anonymous] (2002); Sanchez (2002); Smale (2002); Smale et al. (2002)Collected from the beach by Vic Cockcroft of the Centre for Dolphin Studies. Tissue samples taken. Specimen was examined, measured and dissected by Malcolm Smale and Leonard Compagno. Mould of the animal was used for educational displays.
186 January 2003Tablon, Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines?TL: 4.97 m; BD: 1.01 mCaught by fishermanConsumedYasay (2003)Caught by fisherman Eldiposo Pabaida. Personnel of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources 10 (BFAR 10) measured the specimen and took several photographs.
1926 May 2003Dana Point, California?TL(estimate): 20–25 ft (6–7.6 m); WT(estimate): 5 tonsSighted at seaReleasedRobbins (2003)Sighted by Scott Caldwell from the Leslie Anne. A rope was temporarily tied around the animal's tail, preventing escape. No photographs taken; unconfirmed sighting.
203 July 2003800 m off Ki-Lei-Bi, Hualien County, TaiwanMaleTL: ~2.5 m; WT: 490 kgCaught in netConsumedMollet (2004)Caught by fisherman Li. Specimen bought by local seafood store. Stomach was found to be empty.
217 August 2003Omaezaki, Shizuoka, JapanMaleTL: 4.3 m?Deposited at Tokai UniversityFuruta (2003); Burgess (N.d.)Prepared for display by taxidermist.
228 March 200441.6 nautical miles (77.0 km) off Posorja Port, Guayas, Ecuador (2°54.374′S 81°14.858′W)MaleTL: 4.2 m; WT: ~600 kgCaught in trammel netSent to marketRomero & Cruz (2004)Caught by small fishing vessel that was unable to bring it aboard. Assisted by the Ecuadorian tuna fish ship Betty Elizabeth. Animal was alive at time of capture and regurgitated food consisting mainly of Engraulis ringens. Surface temperature of the sea was 23.6 °C.
2313 March 2004Gapang Beach, northern tip of SumatraImmature maleTL: 1.767 m; WT: 13.82 kgFound washed ashoreDeposited at Cibinong MuseumLumba Lumba Dive Centre (2004); White et al. (2004)Smallest recorded specimen. On public display.
2419 April 2004Ichihara, Tokyo Bay, JapanFemaleTL: 5.63 m; WT: 2,679 lb (1,215 kg)Found washed ashoreTaxidermy specimen displayed at the Natural History Museum and InstituteOsedo (2004)Survived several days before dying from stress. Identified by Masaki Miya, curator of fishes at the National History Museum and Institute in Chiba.
2523 April 2004off Ajiro, Shizuoka, JapanFemaleTL: ~4.9 mCaught by fishermenDiscardedFuruta (2004)Japanese newspaper article mentions total length of 5.5-5.6 m and weight of "1", implying over 1 ton.
264 November 2004Barangay Namocon, Tigbauan, Iloilo, PhilippinesFemaleTL: 5.04 m; WT: ~1 tonStranded on beachPreserved in tank at SEAFDEC Museum[Anonymous] (2004); Bagarinao (2004)Stranded alive at around 5 pm and died at around 10 pm. Removed from the beach by 16 fishermen. Preserved in 10% formalin in a 1-ton fiberglass tank.
2723 January 2005off Kisei cho Nishiki, Mie, Japan, at 200 m depthFemaleTL: 5.28 mCaught in purse seineDeposited at Toba AquariumFuruta (2005)Prepared by taxidermist for display at the aquarium.
2830 January 2005Macajalar Bay, Cagayan de Oro, PhilippinesFemale?TL: 4.17 m; WT: ~1000 kgCaught in netBuriedElizaga (2005a); Elizaga (2005b); Lumingkit et al. (2005); Ellorin (2005)Caught by fisherman Sofronio Casañares. It pulled Casañares's paddle-driven banca for around an hour before stopping, apparently due to exhaustion. Specimen was dissected prior to burial.
29~25 April 2005Hualien Port, Hualien County, Taiwan?WT: 580 kgCaught by ocean sunfish driftnettersSold at market for human consumptionWang & Yang (2005a)Described by fishermen as "big mouthed shark with no teeth".
302 May 2005Hualien Port, Hualien County, Taiwan?WT: 580 kgCaught by ocean sunfish driftnettersSold at market for human consumptionWang & Yang (2005b)Described by fishermen as "big mouthed shark with no teeth".
314 May 2005Hualien Port, Hualien County, TaiwanFemaleTL: 7.09 m?; WT: 689 kgCaught by ocean sunfish driftnetterDissected at Taipei Zoo/Academia SinicaWang & Yang (2005c)Presumed to be pregnant based on swollen belly. Measured by Shih-Chu Yang. One ectoparasite collected from specimen.
325 May 2005off Hualien County, TaiwanFemaleWT: 807 kgCaught by fishermenDissected at Taipei ZooWang & Yang (2005d)Likely to have been pregnant. Sold directly to Kwung-Tsao Shao of the Academia Sinica.
335 June 2005off Hualien County, Taiwan?WT: 400–500 kgCaught by fishermen?Lin (2005)Fifth megamouth shark caught in the area within two and a half months.
3426 January 20064 km off Bayawan City, Negros Oriental, PhilippinesFemaleTL: 5 m; WT(estimate): 1 ton/750 kgAccidentally caught in fishing netBuried[Anonymous] (2006); Sala (2006)Towed by pumpboat of the Bayawan City government to the city's boulevard, but died before it could be released. Very small shrimp found in stomach.
3512 March 2006Barra, Macabalan, Cagayan de Oro City, PhilippinesFemaleTL: 7 ft 5 in (2.26 m); WT: 60–80 kgAccidentally caught in gillnet?Cabig (2006)Identified by Edward B. Yasay. Animal died before Yasay could study it.
3623 March 2006"China Sea"?TL: 4.7 m; WT: 650 kgCaught by fishermen?Lin (2006)Photograph taken.
372 May 2006Sagami Bay, Yugawara, Kanagawa Prefecture, JapanFemaleTL: 5.7 mFound alive in a fixed shore netDissected and exhibited at the Aburatsubo Marine Park in KanagawaBurgess (2006); Mollet (2012)Could not be initially landed due to adverse wind conditions. Animal was filmed on third day and died soon afterwards.
3816 November 2006Tortugas Bay, Baja California, MexicoImmature femaleTL: 2.149 m; WT: 27 kgAccidentally caught by commercial shark boatOn display at the Regional Fisheries Center of EnsenadaCastillo-Géniz (2006)Accidentally caught by crew of the commercial shark boat F/V Corina del Mar. Examined on November 28 by team of technicians and students led by José Leonardo Castillo-Géniz. Samples taken of stomach contents, teeth, and dermal denticles.
3929 May 2007Barangay Tungkop, Minglanilla, Cebu, Philippines?TL: 8.2 ft (2.5 m); WT: ~40–50 kgFound wounded near shore?Parco (2007a); Parco (2007b)Found alive with head wound; died after several hours.
407 June 2007Sagami Bay, JapanFemaleTL: 5.4 mCaught in netReleased aliveMollet (2012)Photographed, filmed and tagged prior to release.
419 July 2007700 km east of Ibaraki Prefecture, JapanFemaleTL: 3.6–4 m; WT: 360–450 kgCaught in purse seineDeposited at Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium[Anonymous] (2007); Lin (2007); [Anonymous] (2011a, b, c)Brought to Ishinomaki port and fish market in Miyagi Prefecture. Frozen and transferred to Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium. Dissected at Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium between March 1–3, 2011, in preparation for plastination. During dissection, internal organs were removed, vertebrae sampled for age determination, and head subjected to a CT scan.
4227 September 2007Hinunangan, Philippines?TL: 2.74 mFound dead on beach?Tajonera (2009a)Weight unknown. Photographed by Marlou Pan.
43around 30 June 2008off Taiwan?WT: 200+ kg"Captured"?Mollet (2012); Burgess (N.d.)Reported by Victor Lin. No photograph and no length or sex data available.
4410 July 2008off eastern TaiwanFemale?TL(estimate): ~5–5.5 m; WT: 870 kg"Caught"?Mollet (2012); Burgess (N.d.)Claimed to be 9 m long in media reports.
455 September 2008Hinunangan, Philippines?TL: 2.13 mFound stranded alivePushed back into water, presumably swam awayTajonera (2009b)No photographs taken. Identified by AT-Fisheries.
4630 March 2009off eastern coast of Burias Island, Philippines, at ~200 m depthMaleTL: 4 m; WT: ~400–500 kgCaught in gillnet by fishermen targeting Rastrelliger kanagurta and Auxis rocheiConsumedAca (2009); Dell'Amore (2009)Died during capture. Tied up and towed to Barangay Dancalan, Donsol, Sorsogon. Identified by Elson Aca of WWF. Cuts found near left side of mouth. Several shrimp larvae found in stomach.
479 June 2009off eastern TaiwanFemale?TL: 3.90 m; WT: 350 kgCaught by fishermen from Taitung CountyPreserved at local shark museumLin (2009)Bought by local shark museum to be mounted for display.
489 July 2009Praia Grande, Cabo Frio, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilMaleTL: 5.39 mFound dead on beachPartially consumed by localsLima et al. (2009); Gomes & Buttigieg (2009); Mollet (2012)Appeared to have died of natural causes. Autopsy revealed empty stomach.
499 July 2009700 km off Ibaraki Prefecture, JapanFemaleTL: 4 m; WT(estimate): 450 kg"Caught"Flesh sold at market for consumption at Ishinomakiurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080312130501/http://www.sanriku-kahoku.com/news/2007_07/i/070718i-same.htmlpublisher=The Kahoku Shimpo
506 November 200918 miles (29 km) southwest of Benitos Islands, Mexico?TL: 2 mCaught in fishing net?Camacho (2009)Caught by Ensenada fishermen on vessel Famtasma del Mar, captained by Eden Ruvicel.
5125 April 2010Taiwan Strait, off southeastern ChinaMaleTL(estimate): ≥4 m; WT(estimate): >1000 kg; WT(skin): 100–200 kg"Caught"Flesh cut into chunks and sold at market for consumption; skin and jaw saved; to be donated to educational facilityLin (2010a)Photographs taken of skinned specimen only.
5219 June 2010off eastern Taiwan?WT(estimate): ~770 kg"Caught"Flesh sold at market for consumption; jaw savedLin (2010b); Mollet (2012)Purchased by fish dealer in northeastern Taiwan "in poor condition, described as tattered and broken or perhaps even cut open". Photographs taken of jaw and flesh chunks only.
5314 January 2011500m off Owase, Mie, Japan?TL (estimate): 5 m"Bycaught and fled by itself"?Found being entrapped in a set net in early morning, and on 15th, an aquarium at Osaka tried to purchase the individual alive and make it the first exhibition of live animal in the world, but the shark was found missing in 6am, likely to surpass the net rather than breaking through it.url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111010231419/http://mytown.asahi.com/areanews/mie/NGY201101170031.htmltitle=希少サメ「メガマウス」逃げられた 尾鷲・九鬼町沖The Asahi Shimbundate = 2011-01-14
5412 June 2011Bahía de Vizcaíno, off western Baja California peninsula, MexicoImmature maleTL: 3 m"Caught"?Falcón (2011)Sent to Ensenada, Mexico, to be sliced into pieces, examined, and photographed. Gill and muscle structure studied by researchers from Mexico and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Captured by same vessel that caught specimen #38.
551 July 2011Odawara(Sagami Bay), Kanagawa Prefecture, JapanFemaleTL: ~3 m?Deposited at Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Natural HistoryMollet (2012); Burgess (N.d.)Information and photographs provided by Alex Buttigieg (Mollet, 2012). While some fishermen claimed that another shark shored at Ishibashi area nearby was even bigger, the others consider that this report was of the same individual.[2]
56January 2012"Sea of China"?TL: 5.65–5.70 m; WT: 1150–1250 kg??Mollet (2012)Information and photographs provided by Victor Lin (Mollet, 2012).
5716 October 2012off eastern TaiwanFemaleTL(estimate): 6 m [4.29 m without tail]; WT(estimate): 800–900 kg"Caught"Organs preserved and donated to unspecified university; meat soldLin (2012)Tail broke off during recovery. Total intact length estimated by fish dealer who purchased specimen.
5814 April 2014off Shizuoka, JapanFemaleTL: 4.4 meters; WT(estimate): not reported"Caught"Autopsy scheduled for May 2014NHK News Web[3]Specimen will be studied at Tokai University Marine Science Museum, Shizuoka, Japan
5924 December 2014off Futo, Itō, Shizuoka, Japan?? ("Massive")Entrapped in set nets and was releasedThe shark was released because it was too big to bring ashore.journal=板鰓類研究会報第51号author= Fujii M.. from Shimoda Aquariumtitle= 伊豆東海岸定置網へのメガマウスザメ混獲事例より
6028 January 2015off Albay, PhilippinesMale?Washed ashorePreserved on ice pending necropsy and displayWashington Post

Inquirer Southern Luzon
Mother Nature Network

612 June 2015Nghệ An Province, Vietnam?TL(estimate): 5 m; WT(estimate): 800–900 kgWashed ashoreXác cá ‘khủng’ trôi dạt vào bờ biển Nghệ An
6218 April 20165km off Owase, Mie, Japan?TL: 5 m; WT: 1000 kgBycatch in seine netsPurchased with a successful bid by a local fishmonger, then was delivered to a national research institute, kept in a fledge体長5メートル、メガマウス水揚げ 尾鷲港(三重県)publisher=Chunichi Shimbun and Chūkyō Television Broadcasting

On June 11, 2017 an approximately 4 m long megamouth shark was found alive but dying around 9:00 p.m. at Bgy Pondol, Hinunangan, southern Leyte, Philippines. The people in the community tried to push the shark back to the ocean but it had no strength to swim again and was carried back to shore by the current. It had a lot of scratches and wounds on its body, although no particular reason for the shark to be dying was evident. After the shark died, it was decided bury the dead body early in the morning to make sure no one would be able to try it as a meal.

Measurements

  • BD – body diameter.
  • PCL – precaudal length, also known as normal length. It is the length from the tip of the snout to the precaudal pit measured in a straight line.
  • TL – total length from the tip of the snout to the tip of the longer lobe of the caudal fin, usually measured with the lobes compressed along the midline. It is a straight line measure, not measured over the curve of the body.
  • WT – total mass of specimen.

References

  1. "Confirmed Megamouth Shark Sightings". Florida Museum of Natural History. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
  2. Official blog of Odawara Fish Market, 2011, メガマウスザメ Archived 2015-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
  3. NHK News Web (15 April 2014). "Yuikou ni kyodaizame agaru [Giant shark caught in harbor]" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 15 April 2014.
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    • Huge shark hauled from depths. Stevens Point Daily Journal November 17, 1976.
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