Mon, 21 Apr 2014 13:16:26 PDT
It’s not every 
day that you see an 11-foot-long, 805-pound shark at a gas station. But 
last week after Pensacola Beach, Fla., resident Cat West stopped for a 
fill-up and saw a ginormous fish hanging out of the back of a pickup 
truck, he snapped a photo that lit up social media. Now two Florida 
cousins are being lauded for possibly setting a world record for largest
 shortfin mako catch ever.
Earnie
 and Joey Polk, two fishermen who hold records from the International 
Land-Based Shark Fishing Association, say they intended to keep the 
catch a secret—they don't want their angling spots swarmed by 
record-seeking competition. But this particular shortfin mako was simply
 too large to stay hidden in the bed of their pickup.
“That’s probably the best fish we ever caught,” Earnie Polk told the Pensacola News Journal.
 “You’ll spend many, many hours to catch a fish of that caliber or a 
fish of that size.” Torpedo-like shortfin makos are known for being the 
fastest shark in the sea. They've been clocked at speeds of up to 60 
miles per hour. They can also leap 20 feet in the air. 
The
 duo say they normally tag and release the majority of sharks they catch
 (in 2013 they caught 300 sharks and kept 20 of them) as part of the 
National Marine Fisheries Service’s Cooperative Shark Tagging Program. 
However, an hour-long fight with a hook wore out this particular shark 
too much for it to survive. In the above video you can see the big fish 
frantically flopping around after being caught.
Last
 year a study of shark, ray, and cartilage-containing fish species by 
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature found that only one-third of the species can be considered “safe” from extinction. The shortfin mako is one of the fish listed on IUCN’s Red List as “vulnerable” globally.
The
 shark the Polk cousins caught may have once been at the top of the 
ocean food chain, but it ended up being fried and served at a community 
barbecue. Shortfin makos are, along with other shark species, targeted 
across the world for both their meat and their fins. One hundred million sharks die every year.
Earnie
 Polk said what they do is “just a good pastime.” He said he and his 
cousin fish ethically. “We don’t do chumming whatsoever. We fish at 
night. We don’t fish on crowded beaches. We don’t fish anytime there are
 swimmers,” he said. “We don’t draw the fish to the beach. We just catch
 what swims by. The fishermen are there because the fish are there.”
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