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Biggest ever great white shark is lingering just miles away from Florida coast | News US

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The 14-foot shark has moved close to a popular Florida beach town (Picture: SWNS)

The biggest great white shark ever recorded in the Atlantic is lingering just six miles off the coast of a major tourist destination.

The 14-foot shark, named Contender, most recently ‘pinged’ last week approximately six miles off St. Augustine, Florida.

Weighing 1,700 pounds, the creature vanished north to Canada’s Gulf of St. Lawrence – and is now back in Florida waters after an impressive 1,000+ mile odyssey.

Scientists say the shark could point them to one of science’s biggest mysteries – where great white sharks mate.

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His return to shore on March 12 comes at peak breeding season – and researchers are watching his every move.

The move is a dramatic shift from his mid-February location off Cape Fear, North Carolina, where researchers had been monitoring his southward migration.

‘Contender has become a pretty famous shark, in part because he’s the largest mature male that OCEARCH has ever tagged,’ John P. Tyminski, senior data scientist at OCEARCH, said.

OCEARCH researchers originally tagged Contender offshore of the Florida-Georgia border on January 17 of last year, beginning what would become one of the most fascinating tracking stories in the organisation’s history.

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‘He’s shown very interesting movements – gone all the way up into the Gulf of St. Lawrence during the summer and has come all the way back down,’ Tyminski said.

The shark’s epic migration covered thousands of miles along the Atlantic coast, demonstrating the incredible range the apex predators can travel.

What makes Contender’s current location particularly significant to researchers is both his proximity to shore and the timing of his return to Florida waters.

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Scientists tagged Contender in the Atlantic Ocean (Picture: SWNS)

His recent movements have brought him much closer to the coastline than his previous positions further north.

‘His recent move brings him closer to shore,’ Tyminski said, noting that the shark had previously been tracked in the Carolinas before making his way back to Florida’s Atlantic coast.

Contender represents more than just an impressive specimen – he’s a key to unlocking one of the ocean’s greatest mysteries.

As a sexually mature male, his movement patterns could provide crucial insights into the reproductive biology of great white sharks.

‘We keep a close eye on sharks like Contender because, again, he’s sexually mature,’ Tyminski said. ‘One of the questions that we have is where mating takes place for white sharks?’

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The timing of Contender’s return to warmer waters aligns with researchers’ theories about great white shark breeding behaviour.

Scientists believe the late winter and early spring period could be critical for mating activity among these magnificent predators.

‘We hypothesise that mating likely occurs or could occur in the late winter, early spring period,’ Tyminski said. ‘So we’re right in the midst of that.’

This makes tracking mature sharks like Contender invaluable for conservation efforts.

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By monitoring the movement patterns of both mature males and females during this crucial time period, researchers hope to identify potential mating grounds and better understand the reproductive cycle of great white sharks.

‘Keeping an eye on white sharks like Contender can give us some indirect clues as to where mating may be occurring,’ Tyminski said.

‘It is definitely one of the questions that we still really want to try to answer to help protect and conserve white sharks.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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