Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Species Account/Isurus oxyrinchus"

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{{Taxobox
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<noinclude><translate><!--T:1-->
| name = Shortfin mako shark
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</noinclude>
| status = VU
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{{species id
| status_system = iucn3.1
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|common_name=Shortfin Mako
| status_ref =<ref>{{cite press release |title=More oceanic sharks added to the IUCN Red List |publisher=[[IUCN]] |date=2007-02-22 |url=http://www.iucn.org/en/news/archive/2007/02/22_pr_sharks.htm |language= |accessdate=2007-02-25 |quote=The global threat status was heightened for shortfin mako, a favorite shark among commercial and recreational fishermen, from ''Near Threatened'' in 2000 to ''Vulnerable'' today.}}</ref>
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|latin_name=Isurus oxyrinchus
| image = Shortfin_mako_piro2.jpg‎
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|image=Isurus oxyrinchus by mark conlin2.JPG
| image_width=240 px
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|description=
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
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The 'Shortfin Mako Shark (''Isurus oxyrinchus''—meaning "sharp nose") is a large mackerel shark. It is commonly referred to as the ''mako shark'' together with the longfin mako shark (''Isurus paucus'').
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
 
| classis = [[Chondrichthyes]]
 
| subclassis = [[Elasmobranchii]]
 
| ordo = [[Lamniformes]]
 
| familia = [[Lamnidae]]
 
| genus = ''[[Isurus]]''
 
| species = '''''I. oxyrinchus'''''
 
| range_map = Isurus oxyrinchus distmap2.png
 
| range_map_width = 240px
 
| range_map_caption = Range of shortfin mako shark (in blue)
 
| binomial = ''Isurus oxyrinchus''
 
| binomial_authority = [[Constantine Samuel Rafinesque-Schmaltz|Rafinesque]], 1810
 
}}
 
{{Sharksportal}}
 
  
The '''shortfin mako shark''', ''Isurus oxyrinchus'' ("sharp nose"), is a large [[mackerel shark]]. Along with the closely related [[longfin mako]] (''Isurus paucus'') it is commonly referred to as "'''mako shark'''".
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The Shortfin Mako is a fairly large species of shark. An average adult specimen will measure around 3.2 meters in length and weigh from 60-135 kg. Females are larger than males. The largest "mako" taken (not verified between the two species) on hook-and-line was 505.8 kg.  
  
==Anatomy and appearance==
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This species grows to an average full-grown length of 1.82&ndash;3.2&nbsp;m (6&ndash;10&nbsp;ft)<ref><http://www.sdnhm.org/kids/sharks/shore-to-sea/mako.html></ref><ref><http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Isurus_oxyrinchus.html></ref> and to a weight of approximately 60–400&nbsp;kg (135-880&nbsp;lb).<ref>http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/shortfinmako/shortfinmako.html</ref>  The largest reported shortfin mako was a male with a weight of 454&nbsp;kg (1,000&nbsp;lb) and measuring 4.02&nbsp;m (13.2&nbsp;ft), although a near record-sized female shortfin mako measuring 3.96&nbsp;m (13&nbsp;ft) had a weight of 794&nbsp;kg (1,750&nbsp;lb).<ref>[http://homepage.mac.com/mollet/Io/Io_large.html large shortfin makos<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> It is typically a bluish back with a white underside. Although the sexes grow at about the same rate, females are thought to have a longer [[life expectancy|life span]], and generally grow larger and more rotund, there are cases when an angry mako will jump out of the water and into the boat after it has been caught on the hook. Mako sharks have a better hydrodynamic shape than all other sharks other than the salmon shark, and this, combined with the lamnidae's typical high aerobic muscle mass, reflects in the spectacular speed and agility of both the longfin and shortfin makos. Makos have placoid scales that covers the skin to reduce friction during swimming, which makes the skin very abrasive.
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The Shortfin Mako is cylindrical in shape, with a vertically-elongated tail that assists its highly hydrodynamic lifestyle. The Mako is in fact the fastest shark of all. This species' color is brilliant metallic blue dorsally and white ventrally, although coloration varies as the shark ages and increases in size. The line of demarcation between blue and white on the body is distinct. The underside of the snout and the area around the mouth are white. Larger specimens tend to possess darker color that extends onto parts of the body that are white in smaller individuals. The juvenile mako differs in that it has a clear blackish stain on the tip of the snout. The Longfin mako shark very much resembles the Shortfin, but has larger pectoral fins, dark rather than pale coloration around the mouth and larger eyes. The presence of only one lateral keel on the tail and the lack of lateral cusps on the teeth distinguish the makos from the closely related porbeagle sharks of the genus ''Lamna''. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhHDXk8g4FE Mako surprises diver]
  
The shortfin mako shark is a sleek spindle-shaped shark with a long conical snout. This shark has short [[pectoral fin]]s and a crescent shaped [[caudal fin|caudal (tail) fin]]. There is a distinct caudal keel on the caudal base. Its second [[dorsal fin]] is much smaller than the first. The apex of pectoral fin and first dorsal fin are rounded in younger makos. The teeth are slender and slightly curved with no lateral cusps and are visible even when the mouth is closed. There is marked countershading on this shark; dorsally it is a metallic indigo blue while ventrally it is white.<ref name="GG"/>
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|range=
== Sustainable consumption ==
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The shortfin mako inhabits offshore temperate and tropical seas worldwide. The closely related longfin mako shark, ''Isurus paucus'', is found in the Gulf Stream or warmer offshore waters.
In 2010, Greenpeace International has added the [[shortfin mako shark]] ([[Isurus oxyrhinchus]] or [[mackerel shark]]) to its seafood red list. "The Greenpeace International seafood red list is a list of fish that are commonly sold in supermarkets around the world, and which have a very high risk of being sourced from unsustainable fisheries."<ref>[http://www.greenpeace.org/international/seafood/red-list-of-species Greenpeace International Seafood Red list]</ref>
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}}
 
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==Naming==
 
In 1809, Constantine Rafinesque was the first person who described shortfin mako in the scientific literature and coined the name Isurus oxyrinchus ([[Isurus]] means "the same tail", oxyrinchus means "pointy snout", both in Latin). The name "mako" comes from the [[Māori language]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maori.info/maori_language.htm|title=Maori language - a glossary of useful words from the language of the Maori New Zealand|accessdate=2006-08-11}}</ref> meaning either the mako shark or a shark tooth. It may simply have originated from a dialectal variation as it is similar to the common words for shark in a number of [[Polynesian languages]] - ''makō'' in the [[Ngai Tahu|Kāi Tahu]] Māori dialect,<ref name="DMaori">{{cite book|title=Dictionary of the Maori Language|author=H.W.Williams|edition=7th|date=1971}}</ref> ''mangō'' in other Māori dialects,<ref name="DMaori"/> ''ma'o'' in [[Tahitian language|Tahitian]], and ''mano'' in [[Hawaiian language|Hawaiian]]. The first written usage is in [[Samuel Lee (linguist)|Lee]] & [[Thomas Kendall|Kendall's]] ''Grammar and vocabulary of the language of New Zealand'' (1820), which simply states "Máko; A certain fish".<ref>{{cite book|title=Oxford: The Dictionary of New Zealand English: New Zealand words and their origins|date=1997}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=mako|title=Online Etymology Dictionary|accessdate=2008-03-08}}</ref> [[Richard Taylor (missionary)|Richard Taylor's]] ''A leaf from the natural history of New Zealand'' (1848) is more elaborate: "Mako, the shark which has the tooth so highly prized by the Maoris".<ref>{{cite book|title=A leaf from the natural history of New Zealand|author=Richard Taylor|date=1848|page=xiii|nopp=true}}</ref>
 
<!-- the 1727 reference that appears in the Oxford English Dictionary and others is a misinterpretation of the Japanese word "makko" (sperm whale)-->
 
 
 
==Diet==
 
[[Image:Close up of mako shark head 005.jpg|thumb|left|The head of a mako shark.]]
 
The shortfin mako feeds mainly upon [[cephalopods]], bony fishes including mackerels, tunas, bonitos, [[swordfish]], and [[sailfish]], but it may also eat other sharks, porpoises, sea turtles, and seabirds. They hunt by using their sheer speed, swimming vertically up and take large bites on the preys flanks and fins. Makos swim deeper than their prey, so they have a view what is above and have a high probability of seeing and attacking the prey before they are seen themselves. Biting the [[caudal peduncle]] can immobilize the prey. In Ganzirri and Isola Lipari, [[Sicily]], shortfin makos have been found with amputated swordfish bills impaled into their head and gills, suggesting from the dangerous location of the wounds found on the Mako sharks that swordfish seriously injure and likely kill makos.  In addition, this location, off the coast of Sicily and the timing, late spring and early summer,  corresponding to the swordfish's spawning cycle suggests that these makos prey on swordfish while they are most vulnerable, typical of many predators.<ref name="SG">{{cite web |url=http://sharks-med.netfirms.com/med/mako.htm |title=The Shark Gallery - Shortfin Mako Shark (Isurus oxyrinchus) |publisher="The [[Shark Trust]]"|accessdate=2008-10-02}}</ref>
 
 
 
Shortfin mako shark consumes 3% of the total body weight in a day and it takes about 1 1/2 days to 2 days to assimilate an average-sized meal. Due to their high metabolic energy and power. While an inactive species such as, [[sandbar shark]] consumes 0.6% of the total body weight a day and it took 3 to 4 days to absorb an average-sized meal. An analysis of the stomach contents of 399 male and female mako sharks ranging from 67 to 328&nbsp;cm suggest makos from Cape Hatteras to the Grand Banks prefer [[bluefish]] to any other food source. In the study, bluefish constituted 77.5% of the diet by volume. The average capacity of the stomach was 10% of the body weight. Shortfin makos consumed 4.3 to 14.5% of the available bluefish between Cape Hatteras and Georges Bank.<ref> {{cite journal|title=Food, Feeding Habits, and Estimates of Daily Ration of the Shortfin Mako (Isurus oxyrinchus ) in the Northwest Atlantic.|journal=Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences|date=1982|first=|last=|coauthors=|volume= 39|issue=  3|pages=407–414.|id= |url=http://md1.csa.com/partners/viewrecord.php?requester=gs&collection=ENV&recid=226343&q=Shortfin+mako&uid=793124504&setcookie=yes|format=|accessdate=2008-11-04|doi=10.1139/f82-058|last1=Stillwell|first1=C.E. }}</ref>
 
 
 
Shortfin makos over 3&nbsp;m (10&nbsp;ft.) have been found to have interior teeth considerably wider and flatter than smaller makos, which enables them to prey effectively upon dolphins, swordfish, and other sharks.<ref name="SS">{{cite news | first= Martin | last= R. Aidan. | coauthors= | title=Open Ocean: the Blue DesertShortfin Mako | date=2003 | publisher=ReefQuest Centre for Shark Research | url =http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/ecology/ocean-mako.htm | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-11-14 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
In recent years it has been suggested that adult makos infrequently attack free-swimming dolphins.  This hypothesis appeared validated when an amateur videotaper, taken in Pacific waters, emerged, showing a moribund spotted dolphin whose tail was almost completely severed, just after a shark attack.  The video shows a very large shortfin mako circling the dying dolphin.  Makos also have the tendency to scavenge on long-lined and netted fish.<ref>{{cite news | first=Ian | last=Fergusson | coauthors= | title=Shortfin Mako Shark (Isurus oxyrinchus) | date= | publisher= | url =http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/sharktrust/mako.shtml | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-11-18 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
==Distribution==
 
[[Image:Isurus-oxyrinchus.jpg|right|thumb|]]
 
The shortfin mako is particularly found in offshore [[temperate]] and [[tropical]] seas worldwide. The closely related [[longfin mako shark]], ''Isurus paucus'', is found in the [[Gulf Stream]] or warmer offshore waters.
 
 
 
It is a [[pelagic]] species that can be found from the surface down to depths of 150&nbsp;m (490&nbsp;ft.).  The shortfin mako is found in blue waters, normally far from land though occasionally closer to shore, around islands or inlets.<ref name="SG"/>  One of only four known [[Warm-blooded|endothermic]] sharks, it is seldom found in waters colder than 16° [[Celsius|C]] (61° [[Fahrenheit|F]]).<ref>{{cite news | title= Shortfin Mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) | date=05/08/29 | publisher=Shark Foundation / Hai-Stiftung | url =http://www.shark.ch/Database/Search/species.html?sh_id=1027 | accessdate = 2008-11-18 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
In the western [[Atlantic]] it can be found from [[Argentina]] and the [[Gulf of Mexico]] to [[Gulf of Maine#Geographic features and biological importance|Browns Bank]] off of [[Nova Scotia]]. In [[Canada|Canadian]] waters these sharks are not abundant as they prefer warm waters, but neither are they rare. Shortfin makos are often found in the same waters as swordfish as they are a source of food and both fish prefer similar environmental conditions.<ref>{{cite news | first=Steven | last=Campana | coauthors= Warren Joyce,Zoey Zahorodny | title=Shortfin Mako | date=2 October 2008 | publisher=The Canadian Shark Research Laboratory | url =http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/shark/english/skull6.htm | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-11-16 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
It is suggested shortfin makos travel long distances to seek adequate prey or fitting mates.  In December 1998, a female shortfin mako tagged off California was captured in the central Pacific by a Japanese research vessel, meaning this fish traveled over 1,725 miles (2,780 kilometers). One mako is known to swim 1,322 miles (2,128 km) in 37 days, averages 36 miles (58 km) a day.<ref name="SS"/>
 
 
 
==Behavior==
 
The shortfin mako's speed has been recorded at 50&nbsp;km/h (31&nbsp;mph), and there are reports that it can achieve bursts of up to 74&nbsp;km/h (46&nbsp;mph).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/shark_profiles/i_oxyrinchus.htm|title=Biology of the Shortfin Mako|publisher=ReefQuest Centre for Shark Research|accessdate=2006-08-12|author=R. Aidan Martin}}</ref> It can jump up to 9&nbsp;m (28&nbsp;ft.) in the air. Due to its speed and agility, this high-leaping fish is sought as [[Game (food)|game]] worldwide.  This shark is highly migratory. Its endothermic constitution partly accounts for its relatively great speed.<ref name="MK">{{cite news | first=Nancy | last=Passarelli | coauthors= Craig Knickle and Kristy DiVittorio | title=SHORTFIN MAKO | date= | publisher=Florida Museum of Natural History | url =http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/ShortfinMako/Shortfinmako.html | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-10-06 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
There is still some uncertainty about its lifespan, but it is suspected to reach ages of between 12 to 24 years.
 
 
 
Like other [[Lamnidae|lamnid]] sharks, the shortfin mako has a heat exchange circulatory system that allows the shark to be seven to ten degrees warmer than the surrounding water. This system enables the shortfin to maintain a high level of activity.<ref name="GG">{{cite news | first=M. McGrouther |  title=Shortfin Mako | date=May 2007 | publisher=Australian Museum | url =http://www.australianmuseum.net.au/fishes/fishfacts/fish/ioxyrinchus.htm | accessdate = 2008-11-15  }}</ref> This could be the reason for their great hunting abilities.  The higher body temperature give the sharks an advantage over its cold-blooded prey.<ref>{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=Shortfin Mako Shark | date=Tuesday, October 30, 2007 | publisher=2008 Discovery Communications, LLC | url =http://dsc.discovery.com/sharks/shortfin-mako-shark.html | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-11-04 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
==Reproduction==
 
The shortfin mako shark is a yolk-sac [[Ovoviviparity|ovoviviparous]] shark, meaning it gives birth to live young. Developing embryos feed on unfertilized eggs produced by the mother in the uterus during the gestation period of 15 to 18 months. This is called ([[oophagy]]) (i.e. egg-eating). In fact, there is no evidence of sibling cannibalism in short-fin mako as there is in the sand tiger shark (''Carcharias taurus''). The 4 to 18 surviving young are born live in the late winter and early spring at a length of about 70&nbsp;cm. It is believed that females may rest for 18 months after birth before the next batch of eggs are fertilized.
 
 
 
Shortfin mako shark has more metabolic energy and muscular power for its active lifestyle. This suggest makos are thought to grow much faster than many species. For [[sandbar shark]] needs 12 to 14 years to reach 40-45 kg when mature, while an male shortfin mako need 4 1/2 to 5 years to reach 136 kg (2 m) and female reaches 227 kg (2.7 to 2.9 m) in 7 years, when matured. However, this may still be in question and some biologist think makos grow very slowly.
 
The oldest ever found "Caroline" is at the walka aquarium.
 
 
 
One study conducted by NOAA in 1997, showed times at liberty ranged from 13 days to 12.8 years.  This phenomenal 12.8 year recapture was in 1997 the longest time at liberty for any mako.  Along with the shark itself a piece of the backbone was collected to confirm the age estimates.  The recapture of this shark proved that shortfin makos can in fact live at least 13 years.  This information can in turn be used to better manage the species.<ref name='WW'>{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=1997 OVERVIEW | date=December 9, 2004 | publisher=Apex Predators Program | url =http://na.nefsc.noaa.gov/sharks/newsletter/97/97overview.html | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-11-16 | language = }}</ref>
 
 
 
==Distinguishing characteristics==
 
* Teeth are visible even when the mouth is closed
 
* Teeth are long and slender with smooth-edged cusps
 
* Distinct countershading, dorsally blue and ventrally white
 
* Moderately short pectoral fins
 
* Underside of the snout is white<ref name="MK"/>
 
 
 
==Captivity==
 
Of all recorded attempts to keep [[pelagic]] shark species in captivity, the short-fin mako has fared the poorest; even more so than the [[oceanic whitetip shark]], the [[blue shark]] and the [[great white shark]]. The current record is held by a specimen that, in 2001, was kept at the New Jersey Aquarium for only five days. Like past attempts at keeping ''Isurus'' in captivity, the animal appeared strong upon arrival but had trouble negotiating the walls of the aquarium, refused to feed, quickly weakened and expired.<ref>[http://homepage.mac.com/mollet/ Elasmobranch Research around Monterey Bay<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
 
 
 
==Attacks on humans==
 
The shortfin mako has a formidable and foreboding appearance.  The [[International Shark Attack File|ISAF]] statistics on attacking species of sharks purports that between 1580 and 2007, the shortfin mako has had eight recorded unprovoked [[Shark attack|attacks]] on humans with two ending in fatality and twenty [[boat]] attacks.<ref>[http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/sharks/statistics/species2.htm ISAF Statistics on Attacking Species of Shark<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
 
In New Zealand Mako sharks are often encountered in the waters of the North Island.  Sharks can be attracted to caught fish with accounts of spear fishermen being approached by curious sharks and even being "slapped" with [[cavitation]] bubbles from a swift tail flick.
 
 
 
==Short fin mako sharks in popular culture==
 
* A mako shark appeared in Ernest Hemingway's novella, ''[[The Old Man and the Sea]]''.
 
* Three short-fin mako sharks appear as the antagonists of the film ''[[Deep Blue Sea]]''. Shown using animatronics and CGI, the three sharks are genetically engineered to be super smart, and in one case, extremely large. They proceed to destroy the facility they are housed in, and eat most of the scientists studying them, before they are eventually killed (each is killed as an homage to the deaths of the sharks in the Jaws series). There is also a '[[tiger shark]]' seen early in the film, but its appearance is really that of a mako shark with stripes.
 
 
 
==See also==
 
* {{Outline|Outline of sharks}}
 
 
 
==Notes==
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
 
 
==References==
 
{{wikispecies|Isurus oxyrinchus}}
 
* {{IUCN2006|assessors=Stevens|year=2000|id=39341|title=Isurus oxyrinchus|downloaded=6 May 2006}} Database entry includes justification for why this species is near threatened
 
* {{ITIS|ID=159924|taxon=Isurus oxyrinchus|year=2006|date=23 January}}
 
* {{FishBase species | genus = Isurus | species = oxyrinchus | month = May | year = 2006}}
 
{{Taxon|type=fish|name=Shortfin mako shark|catlifeid=1280961|biolibid=138648|genus=Isurus|species=oxyrinchus|gbifid=13551319/|iucnid=39341|eolid=17144829}}
 
 
 
==External links==
 
* ARKive - [http://www.arkive.org/species/GES/fish/Isurus_oxyrinchus/ images and movies of the shortfin mako ''(Isurus oxyrinchus)'']
 
* [http://www.snopes.com/photos/animals/yarmouth.asp CANADA: Record Mako Shark Caught]
 
* {{marinebio|id369|name=Shortfin mako shark, ''Isurus oxyrinchus''}}
 
* [http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn15151-why-a-speeding-shark-is-like-a-golf-ball.html?feedId=online-news_rss20 Shortfin mako sharks can shoot through the ocean at up to 50 miles per hour], ''New Scientist'', 7 November 2008
 
 
 
[[Category:Lamnidae]]
 
[[Category:Ovoviviparous fish]]
 
 
 
[[bg:Акула мако]]
 
[[ca:Solraig]]
 
[[de:Kurzflossen-Mako]]
 
[[es:Isurus oxyrinchus]]
 
[[fr:Requin mako]]
 
[[ko:청상아리]]
 
[[it:Isurus oxyrinchus]]
 
[[nl:Kortvinmakreelhaai]]
 
[[ja:アオザメ]]
 
[[no:Makrellhai]]
 
[[pl:Ostronos atlantycki]]
 
[[pt:Tubarão-mako]]
 
[[ru:Акула-мако]]
 
[[sk:Mako rýchly]]
 
[[fi:Makrillihai]]
 
[[sv:Makohaj]]
 
[[tr:Sivriburun camgöz]]
 
[[vi:Cá mập mako vây ngắn]]
 
[[zh:尖吻鲭鲨]]
 

Latest revision as of 23:23, 20 September 2021

Isurus oxyrinchus

Isurus oxyrinchus

Shortfin Mako (Isurus oxyrinchus)

Where found: The shortfin mako inhabits offshore temperate and tropical seas worldwide. The closely related longfin mako shark, Isurus paucus, is found in the Gulf Stream or warmer offshore waters.

Description: The 'Shortfin Mako Shark (Isurus oxyrinchus—meaning "sharp nose") is a large mackerel shark. It is commonly referred to as the mako shark together with the longfin mako shark (Isurus paucus). The Shortfin Mako is a fairly large species of shark. An average adult specimen will measure around 3.2 meters in length and weigh from 60-135 kg. Females are larger than males. The largest "mako" taken (not verified between the two species) on hook-and-line was 505.8 kg. The Shortfin Mako is cylindrical in shape, with a vertically-elongated tail that assists its highly hydrodynamic lifestyle. The Mako is in fact the fastest shark of all. This species' color is brilliant metallic blue dorsally and white ventrally, although coloration varies as the shark ages and increases in size. The line of demarcation between blue and white on the body is distinct. The underside of the snout and the area around the mouth are white. Larger specimens tend to possess darker color that extends onto parts of the body that are white in smaller individuals. The juvenile mako differs in that it has a clear blackish stain on the tip of the snout. The Longfin mako shark very much resembles the Shortfin, but has larger pectoral fins, dark rather than pale coloration around the mouth and larger eyes. The presence of only one lateral keel on the tail and the lack of lateral cusps on the teeth distinguish the makos from the closely related porbeagle sharks of the genus Lamna. Mako surprises diver