Category Archives: Great White Sharks

Great White Education: “LeeBeth” The Shark Flies Banner For Conservancy

“LeeBeth” might sound like the name of a girl who lived down the street in your youth.

The name certainly has an endearing quality, with a twinge of southern charm.

And that makes sense considering she first came to public awareness off the coast of South Carolina.

Incase you haven’t figured it out, “LeeBeth” isn’t the girl next door, but a 2,600 pound great white shark caught, fitted with a satellite transmitter and released by Capt. Chip Michalove of Outcast Fishing Dec. 8, 2023.

LeeBeth photo courtesy Capt. Chip Michalove.

Her journey into Texas Gulf waters over the next two months became a media sensation and not only brought attention to her kind but an organization whose sole focus is to educate and inspire people about them.

The Atlantic White Shark Conservancy (AWSC) based out of Cape Cod has set out to “support scientific research, improve public safety, and educate the community to inspire white shark conservation.”

“LeeBeth” made thousands aware of the group’s app, “Sharktivity”.

According to AWSC officials, the app was developed with input from the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, the Cape Cod National Seashore, and officials from Cape Cod and South Shore towns to raise awareness of the presence of white sharks off their coast.

The App sightings are fed by researchers, safety officials, and users that upload photos for confirmation. By enabling App users to report shark sightings and upload photos for confirmation, we are effectively crowd-sourcing critical data points on where sharks are spotted so as to reduce encounters and promote safety. Data from sharks with acoustic tags and Smart Position and Temperature Tags (SPOT) are also available on the App.

Public sightings submitted through Sharktivity will be verified by the New England Aquarium.

Additionally, through the AWSC and the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (DMF), acoustic detection data for tagged white sharks off the coast of Massachusetts and a catalog of over 600 tagged and untagged individual Northwest Atlantic white sharks, identified by AWSC, can be explored through the White Shark Logbook.

AWSC also does educational outreach, special shark-centric eco tours and an important and often (in my opinion) missing factor in shark awareness-safety.

Let’s face it. Great whites sharks are the largest predatory fish on the planet and they do occasionally attack humans. Making people aware of them is important for both the sake of people and sharks.

For example, I had no idea there are purple flags that identify great white presence in an area.

I learned that from AWSC.

You can learn much more about white shark safety here.

“We love interacting with the public to raise awareness of these amazing creatures,” said AWSC research scientist Megan Winton.

“These are truly incredible animals and we want to help raise their conservation profile and to educate people about potential interactions.”

AWSC has been mostly involved on the East Coast but they are already helping the cause along the Gulf Coast where white shark sightings are on the rise.

This is proven by AWSC’s tagged sharks along with that of another research group called Ocearch.

“We still has much to learn about great whites and their movements and what we’re seeing in the Gulf of Mexico has been interesting to so many people, myself included. It makes us want to do more to raise awareness of these truly amazing animals,” Winton said.

“LeeBeth” would be proud.

Chester Moore

For more information on the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy click here.

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Great White Shark Shows Up South of New Orleans

A 14 foot, 2.600 pound great white shark has showed up south of New Orleans, La. just a few miles away from the South Pass area.

“LeeBeth”, was fitted with an Atlantic White Shark Conservancy satellite tag by Capt. Chip Michalove off the coast of South Carolina Dec. 8, 2023.

Since then this massive shark has taken an epic trip from the Atlantic to near the Texas/Mexico border at South Padre Island to the Texas/Louisiana border south of Sabine Pass and now in the Mississippi River Delta region.

*Scroll down to read about exclusive reports from the Chandeleur Islands!

“LeeBeth” photo courtesy Capt. Chip Michalove.

Leebeth pinged, which means she breached the surface where a satellite could pick up the signal 8:15 a.m. Friday March 15.

She is not the only great white that has visited the area this year.

“Crystal” and “Keji”, both great whites tagged by research group Ocearch showed up in the same general area in January.

The idea of great white sharks in the Gulf of Mexico might seem strange but it is part of their native range.

Leebeth’s last ping at the time of this writing. Download the Sharktivity app from the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy to keep up with her movements.

Harvest regulation changes in the 1990s have allowed more of these sharks to reach maturity and venture from the Atlantic where researchers believe they are born and enter the Gulf.

NOAA has some extremely interesting older data on great whites in the Gulf of Mexico. Their earliest recorded white shark I could find was off the coast of Sarasota, Fla. on a set line in the winter of 1937. Another specimen was caught in the same area in 1943.

In February 1965, a female was captured in a net intended for bottlenose dolphins at Mullet Key near St. Petersburg. In addition, National Marine Fisheries Service officials reported 35 great whites as bycatch in the Japanese longline fishery in the Gulf from 1979 through 1982.

In the 1963 book Shadows In the Sea; Sharks, Skates & Rays, the presence of great whites in Texas waters as far back as the 1950s is mentioned.

A great white shark seven feet long was caught in 15 fathoms, 12 miles off of Port Aransas, TX  on Feb. 9, 1950. Seven days later, a second great white 11 feet, 4-inches long was caught in the same area. And 10 days later, a third, this one 12 feet, 2 inches long, was caught there. Yet, there has never been a previously reported catches in Texas waters.

Interestingly, the story we did on the whites shark at Sabine Pass inspired two fishermen to report seeing great whites in the Chandeleur Islands which are very close to where LeeBeth and the other great whites pinged.

“I was wade fishing the Chandeleur Islands in 2006 in the aftermarth of Hurricane Katrina. The storm had washed away a bunch of mangrove in the surf but left little islands big enough to climb up on and stand in the surf which left about four to six feet of water beneath these little clumps.”

“So I’m standing on one and saw what I believed to be a great white the size of a Cadillac swim right in front of my little island. When I told the story to the guys I was with nobody believed me and convinced me I saw a big tiger shark. I’m pretty sure after these revelations I was right.”

Another angler reported seeing a white in the Chandeleur Islandes the same year.

“I saw one while wade fishing the Chandeleur Islands about a year after Katrina. It was right after I got back in the boat and it swam right by the boat about 10 feet off our starboard beam in about eight feet of water. It was shocking to say the least.”

These reports at this point while very credible are considered only anecdotal from a research perspective.

However, if white shark tagging research has shown us anything, it is angler stories of great whites from the past seem far more likely to be accurate now since we know without question, these magnificent sharks inhabit the Gulf.

Chester Moore

Acadiana Boat, Sport & RV Show

Mark your calendars for the Acadiana Boat, Sport & RV Show. Connect with everything from new boats to fish equipment and guided fishing trips. Check it out at Evangeline Downs Racetrack & Casino March 22-24.

Follow Chester Moore and Higher Calling Wildlife® on the following social media platforms

@thechestermoore on Instagram

Chester Moore’s YouTube.

Higher Calling Wildlife on Facebook

Email Chester at chester@chestermoore.com.

Subscribe to the Dark Outdoors and Higher Calling Wildlife podcasts on all major podcasting platforms.

So, There’s A Great White Shark Due South of Sabine Pass, TX

Our story on a great white shark showing up just a couple of hundred yards from the surf at South Padre Island went viral.

On Feb. 26, “LeeBeth,” a 14.1 foot, 2,600-pound female fitted with a satellite tag by Capt. Chip Michalove of Outcast Sport Fishing shocked shark lovers when she showed up in Texas.

She was tagged December 8, 2023, off the coast of South Carolina and took an amazing journey that continues as she “pings” all over the Gulf.

You can read that story here.

That means her fin has breached the surface and she has made satellite contact and most recently south of Sabine Pass, TX.

LeeBeth in all of her glory. Photo courtesy Capt. Michalove.

Michalove said this particular shark has pinged more than any other of the 47 he has tagged for the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy.

Since Dec. 26, this shark moved down into Mexican waters, back up toward South Padre and on March 7 was due south of Sabine Pass, TX, approximately 125 miles offshore.

Will she move closer to shore? Perhaps she will move toward Florida.

LeeBeth is a real treat to watch and she is highly unpredictable.

UPDATE 3/09: Heres’ exclusive story about another great white out Sabine Pass. Click here.

The work the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy and Capt. Michalove are doing is amazing.

This particular ping is intriguing to me because it goes back to an early part of my career in 2005 when an offshore charter captain friend called me on a satellite phone 55 miles out of Sabine Pass with a great white sighting.

This began in-depth research on the topic and spawned several award-winning stories including one from the Texas Outdoor Writer’s Association in 2022 for my article “Jaws In Texas Waters” for Texas Fish & Game.

Some didn’t think whites existed in Gulf waters, but the amazing work from Ocearch and the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy has proven otherwise.

Look for more articles coming soon here on great whites in the Gulf of Mexico as well as a forthcoming summer-long shark series.

Click on the “Subscribe to This Blog” link to get updates when I post new content. It’s at the bottom of the post on mobile and on the right side on dektops/laptops.

Look for more on great white sharks in the Gulf of Mexico coming very soon.

Chester Moore

Acadiana Boat, Sport & RV Show

Mark your calendars for the Acadiana Boat, Sport & RV Show. Connect with everything from new boats to fish equipment and guided fishing trips. Check it out at Evangeline Downs Racetrack & Casino March 22-24.

Follow Chester Moore and Higher Calling Wildlife® on the following social media platforms

@thechestermoore on Instagram

Chester Moore’s YouTube.

Higher Calling Wildlife on Facebook

Email Chester at chester@chestermoore.com.

Subscribe to the Dark Outdoors and Higher Calling Wildlife podcasts on all major podcasting platforms.