Australia has two distinct white shark populations
While the sharks can roam around Australia and across ocean basins, they repeatedly return to their home region to breed.
Scientists identified two distinct populations of white shark at the east and west of Bass Strait in Australian waters, prompting researchers to suggest the huge fish may need a regional conservation plan.
The study examined tissue samples from 97 sharks collected around Australia since 1989 which were caught in beach safety programs, as fishery bycatch and during Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) field research. Its findings are broadly consistent with satellite and acoustic tracking research led by CSIRO’s Barry Bruce.
Separate genetics
“The genetic makeup of white sharks west of Bass Strait was different from those on the eastern seaboard of Australia—despite the lack of any physical barrier between these regions,” said Professor John Pandolfi, a Chief Investigator at CoeCRS and The University of Queensland.
“Our tagging and tracking showed that white sharks travel thousands of kilometers,” said Bruce. “But sharks tagged and tracked off eastern Australia did not go west of Bass Strait, and sharks tagged off Western and South Australia rarely went east. When they did—they often returned, so we started to wonder whether there was more than one breeding population.
“Now we know that while white sharks across Australia can mix, the intriguing thing is that they seem to return to either east or western regions to breed.”
The study builds on results by other international research teams that have identified separate genetic populations of white sharks across ocean basins. However, this was the first time such differences had been found at the regional scale.
This shows that while the sharks can roam around Australia and across ocean basins, they repeatedly return to their home region to breed
Regional protection
White shark numbers declined in the 20th century, and the species is now protected in South Africa, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Malta, Namibia, throughout the Mediterranean Sea and globally under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
However, a lack of information on abundance, genetic diversity, reproductive behavior and population structure has prevented accurate assessment of the effectiveness of white shark conservation programs, including an understanding of their population trends.
“The finding may indicate that individual populations of white sharks are more susceptible than previously thought to threats including fishing or changes in the local marine environment,” Dr Jennifer Ovenden from the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) said.
“The key will be to develop regional rather than national management strategies, and to ensure populations are monitored in both regions.”