Meet Scot, the 720kg great white shark swimming off Florida's coast

Florida's got yet another spring breaker in town: Scot, a massive great white shark, has been recorded swimming off the Gulf Coast.

Scot, an adult male, measures just over three metres long and weighs 720 kilograms, according to OCEARCH, the non-profit marine group that spotted the big fish on Thursday.

Scot is the 74th great white shark tagged and released by the group in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, OCEARCH said.

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They fit each animal with an electronic tracker that pings whenever it breaks the ocean surface.

The tracker's records show Scot is a dedicated traveler. He was first tagged in September of 2021 in Nova Scotia - where he was named in honour of the "welcoming and ocean first dedicated people" there by OCEARCH's partners at Sea World. Scot then traveled a total of 6,292 kilometres down the East Coast in just 119 days.

He has been relaxing around the Florida Keys and Gulf Coast since at least Valentine's Day, according to OCEARCH data.

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Sharks typically move towards the shore during the spring and summer, making April and October the months of highest shark activity.

The waters around Florida are home to more than 13 shark species, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

Although iconic films like "Jaws" have portrayed sharks as dangerous predators, attacks in Florida are actually very rare, the commission said. Humans are 30 times more likely to be struck by lightning in the state than to be bitten by a shark, and fewer than 10 people die from shark attacks each year, they said.

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Both OCEARCH and the commission emphasise the great white shark's crucial role as the apex predator in its ecosystem.

"Great white sharks are central to the functioning of ecosystems and the maintenance of biodiversity," says OCEARCH.

They are classified as a vulnerable population by the World Wildlife Fund, just one step away from endangered.

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Meet Scot, the 720kg great white shark swimming off Florida's coast
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