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Your Position: Home - Sports & Entertainment - Everything You Need To Know To Find The Best Shark

Everything You Need To Know To Find The Best Shark

We started Captain Experiences to make it easy to book fishing and hunting guides around the world. With over 1,500 Damn Good Guides, our platform makes finding and booking a trip seamless. Head here to check out our trips.

Shark Fishing: What You Need to Know

Fishing for sharks is an exhilarating experience because these apex predators are as tough as they look. Sharks are some of the oldest animals on earth, and their ability to survive makes them difficult to catch. These toothy fish grow huge and provide memories that will last a lifetime. If you want to land one of these beasts, here’s what you need to know.

What is a Shark?

Sharks are unique animals that have evolved over millions of years to survive. They’re also part of the group of cartilaginous fish, including rays and skates—none of which have bones. Like most apex predators, sharks are carnivores that eat by actively hunting for prey or scavenging. With over 440 species of sharks inhabiting the world’s oceans, they can be small or well over ten feet long.

Where Do Sharks Live?

Sharks primarily live in temperate and tropical waters around the world, inhabiting coastal waters and reefs. However, sharks travel thousands of miles crossing through frigid and tropical waters to find food. Depending on the time of year, sharks can be found almost anywhere around the world. Sharks inhabit waters from shallow coastal areas to deep offshore reefs.

How to Catch a Shark

The most widely used technique to catch sharks is bottom fishing, which is perfect for anglers of all levels. Bottom fishing consists of dropping bait to the seafloor and waiting for a bite. A typical setup is cut bait on a circle hook and a heavy weight. The weight keeps the bait near the bottom, where it leaves a scent trail that attracts sharks and other bottom feeders. Heavy tackle is required to haul in a shark, with stout rods, reels, and wire leaders being the only things that give anglers the advantage.

Best Bait For Shark Fishing

The most common bait for shark fishing is cut bait, but the type of bait varies from location to location. Popular choices for cut bait include bonito, false albacore, squid, and bait fish like mullet. All of the baits work well because they create large scent trails that are especially effective for drawing in sharks.

Shark Fishing Trips

With sharks being found around the world, you can take a trip almost anywhere and find a fishing charter that targets them. If you want to stay in the U.S. the best places to target sharks are along the atlantic and gulf coast. Shark fishing can be intense, and if the danger of handling a shark alone is too much, check out our shark fishing guides who will take care of everything for you.

With over 500 species of sharks in the oceans of our planet, it’s safe to say there’s a huge variety of animals we can call sharks. Although there may be a typical shark image that comes to mind when thinking of these creatures, there are all types, including sharks with gigantic mouths and others that cut out cookie-like chunks from the bodies of their prey. The variety in size, shape, and even migratory behaviour is immense. And, if you want to save them all, you’re going to need to know how to make all of them sound super cool, so we’ve put together a list of seven epic sharks you should tell your friends about, including the basking shark plus lesser-known species like cookie-cutter sharks.

Some of these sharks are truly unbelievable! While you’re at it, be sure to also check out the best places to dive with sharks.

Basking Shark

  • Where to See Basking Sharks: United Kingdom
  • Time of Year: April – October
  • Maximum Length: 11 meters (36 feet)

Without a better word, the basking shark is humungous, spanning up to 11 meters (36 feet) in length and up to 3.9 metric tonnes (4.3 tons) in weight! These are a migratory species, commonly found in British and Irish waters with tracking to show that they avoid cross-ocean migration. The dark grey/brown-toned basking shark feeds on zooplankton by opening its wide mouth peppered with very small teeth. In a single hour, this shark species can filter up to 6,000 litres (approximately 2,000 gallons) through its lengthy gill slits.

Frilled Shark

  • Where to See Frilled Sharks: Unknown, deep sea
  • Time of Year: Unknown
  • Maximum Length: 2 meters (7 feet)

Although sweetly named, there is nothing sweet about frilled sharks. The name comes form the frilly appearance of their gill slits, which make these sharks look positively prehistoric. Long streamline bodies allow these pelagics to swim quickly, like eels, while grabbing their prey with long rows of teeth. However, this spooky species spends the majority of time in the deep, deep sea, making an encounter very unlikely.

Goblin Shark

  • Where to See Goblin Sharks: Atlantic, Pacific and the Indian Ocean
  • Time of Year: April – October
  • Maximum Length: 3 to 6 meters (9.8 to 20 feet)

The goblin shark is a slightly more spine-chilling species compared to other members of the Chondrichthyes class (meaning cartilaginous fish). A protruding snout rests over 35 to 53 rows of upper teeth and 31 to 62 rows of lower teeth, differing in size depending on their role when eating. Interestingly, they are fairly slow swimmers yet neutrally buoyant, preventing disruption to the surrounding water as they sneak up on prey. This species lurk far below sea level at 890 feet and beyond. Lastly, you’ll be happy to know that the goblin shark has no interest in dining on humans.

Cookie-Cutter Shark

  • Where to See Cookie-cutter Sharks: Tropical and Temperate Latitudes, near islands (but not much information is known about this species.)
  • Time of Year: Year-round
  • Maximum Length: 18 – 20 inches (45.7 to 101.6 cm)

Cookie-cutter sharks can be quickly spotted thanks to the dark markings around their neck like a collar. A freaky physical feature of this species is their green-glowing organs visible on their undersides. Cookie-cutters are classed as parasites in the ocean, as they feed off larger species, leaving cookie-cutter-like chunks missing! As the species is so small and these sharks spend the majority of their time in very deep water, little is known about their location and migration tendencies.

Lemon Shark

  • Where to See Lemon Sharks: Atlantic & Pacific Ocean
  • Time of Year: Year-round
  • Maximum Length: 3 meters (10 feet)

With a lemony hue to their skin, lemon sharks blend perfectly into sandy banks, their camouflage providing a helping hand when tracking prey. A robust shape and short snout are ideal qualities for hunting manta rays, bony fish and crustaceans. Plus, they often hunt in congregated groups, and these groups can also sometimes be spotted resting on sea beds (cleaning stations) together.

Megamouth Shark

  • Where to See Megamouth Sharks: Unknown, deep sea
  • Time of Year: Unknown
  • Maximum Length: 5 meters (16 feet)

A striking mouth gape reaching up to a maximum of 1.3 meters (4 feet) is the megamouth shark’s most prominent feature. As well as the salient appearance, this large mouth is crucial for feeding. It allows them to conveniently feed and filter their food out through gills. Megamouths lurk in deep dark waters, possibly all the way down to 4600 meters (15,000 feet), lugging around their huge bodies – with an extreme maximum weight of 1,215 kilograms (2,700 pounds). Additionally, this species is seriously rare, and only 60 have ever been found by researchers.

Bonnethead Shark

  • Where to See Bonnethead Sharks: Western Atlantic (Rhode Island to Gulf of Mexico), Caribbean (Bahamas and Cuba), Eastern Pacific
  • Time of Year: Year-round (preferably in the warmer seasons in each location)
  • Maximum Length: 1.5 meters (5 feet)

Bonnethead sharks are one of the hammerhead species, with smooth, circular, bonnet-like snouts (most hammerheads tend to have ridges in their snouts). The bonnethead shark is a migratory, and these sharks are social beings, often migrating in groups to warmer climates in the winter and cooler waters in the summer. With average habitat depths of 10 to 25 meters (31 to 82 feet), bonnetheads are a more common encounter in subtropical waters compared with other shark species. Due to overfishing, bonnethead sharks are unfortunately classed as an endangered species. Learn more about how you can support endangered species by diving here.

Ready to Meet Some Sharks?

While it’s unlikely your next scuba diving vacation will involve hanging out with cookie-cutter sharks or megamouths in the unknown deep waters, you could definitely plan a trip to encounter others. Take a trip to Fiji or a liveaboard in the Solomon Islands to search for lemon sharks. Or, head to PADI Adventures and book a day trip in search of basking sharks in the United Kingdom.

PADI Travel’s Scuba Travel Experts are available 24/7 to help you decide on your next shark adventure to tell your friends all about!

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Everything You Need To Know To Find The Best Shark

7 Epic Sharks You Should Tell All Your Friends About

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