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Great white sharks may be listed as endangered species

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Such permits could change the seasons that the fishermen, who catch a sizable portion of California’s halibut, can fish. Or they could require them to bring up their nets every 24 hours, reducing the risk of killing young sharks, which can become tangled in the nets and drown.

Still, McCosker and other shark biologists said researchers don’t know whether the white shark population is decreasing or increasing. He noted that there’s some evidence it is going up, including the fact that more sea otters have been found dead in recent years with shark bites.

Chris Lowe, director of California State University, Long Beach’s Shark Lab, said the number of juvenile sharks caught in gill nets in Southern California has increased to about 20 to 25 a year, up from about five a year a decade earlier. That likely means there are more sharks, he said.

Lowe worries that putting great whites on the list would make it more difficult for scientists to study them and would harm fishermen who have been helping researchers. He said roughly half the sharks caught in the gill nets die, but those that are freed have a 96 percent survival rate.

But environmental groups argue that because of the unknowns, the best approach is to add another layer of protection.

Said Jeffers: “It’s always better to be cautious than to find out in a few years that we should have done something.”

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