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Great white sharks may be listed as endangered species

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(MCT) — SAN JOSE, Calif. — They’ve been called everything from killing machines to misunderstood predators who are key to healthy ocean environments. Now great white sharks may be called something else: endangered.

California’s Fish and Game Commission on Wednesday will decide whether to take the first steps to add the ocean’s most storied marine predator to the state endangered species list. Meanwhile, the National Marine Fisheries Service is expected to decide this summer whether to include great whites on the federal endangered list.

If the sharks — which in California waters can grow to 21 feet long and 4,000 pounds — join other struggling species, like California condors and sea otters, on the lists, it could mean tougher rules on gill net fishing. It might even create a new legal tactic for environmental groups to fight coal-fired power plants, since some white sharks have high levels of mercury, which comes from burning coal, in their tissues.

“There is a lot of evidence that white shark population numbers are very low,” said Emily Jeffers, an attorney in the oceans program of the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental group in San Francisco that supports an endangered listing.

“White sharks are really barometers of our ocean’s ecosystem,” she said. “If they’re not doing well, we need to figure out why. They are at the top of the food chain. If we want a healthy ocean, we need healthy sharks.”

Although some top shark biologists say a listing would be premature because it is unclear whether the population is decreasing, Jeffers’ group and two other environmental organizations, Oceana and Shark Stewards, filed a formal petition with the state in August asking that the population of white sharks in the northeastern Pacific Ocean be declared endangered. The groups noted that two recent studies have estimated the population — which ranges between Mexico, Hawaii and Alaska — at 339 adults and “sub-adults” in counts off the Marin County coast and Mexico.

That’s a dangerously small number, they say, putting the sharks “at great risk of extinction,” particularly since half or fewer are female.

Although they were made famous as ruthless killers by Peter Benchley’s 1974 novel “Jaws” and Steven Spielberg’s 1975 film of the same name, white sharks in California rarely attack people. In fact, more people have died from bee stings and dog bites.

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