Movements, recapture patterns and factors affecting the return rate of Carcharhinid and other sharks tagged off northern Australia

Between February 1983 and May 1985, ~10 500 sharks of 23 species were fin-tagged off northern Australia. Tagging concentrated on the commercially important Carcharhinus tilstoni and C. sorrah. Most recaptures were made in 1984 and 1985 but returns continued until May 1997. In all, 579 tages (5.5%) were recovered. Tag shedding was estimated to be low (0.025 per year for C. tilstoni) and tagging mortality was significantly lower for sharks caught by hand line than by gill-net. Australia gill-netters, Taiwanese gill-netters (fishing in the Australian Fishing Zone) and Australian prawn trawlers accounted for most of the returns. THe maximum distance between the release and recapture positions was > 1100 km, but most returns were made within 50 km of the tagging site. Nearly all the releases were in inshore waters fished by Australian vessels. Although many recaptures were made by the offshore Taiwanese fisher, the Taiwanese fishing effort was much higher than for the inshore Australian fishery, so that releative to fishing effort, relative few sharks moved from inshore to offshore waters.

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Published (Metadata Record) 04/03/2026
Last updated 04/03/2026
Organisation Australian Federal Government
License License Not Specified
Update Frequency Unknown