LAST UPDATED: 01.07.2023

LAST UPDATED: 01.07.2023

BLUE SHARK

BLUE SHARK

Prionace glauca

Prionace glauca

The blue shark is a mostly pelagic species and the most wide-ranging shark in the world, inhabiting all temperate and tropical oceans. In the North Atlantic, it migrates over long distances in a circular pattern from Africa to North America, and then Europe, arriving in Canada in the spring and departing in the fall.

A number of blue sharks seasonally enter the Gulf of St. Lawrence where they have been recorded¹ reaching the mouth of the estuary off the Gaspé Peninsula.

¹ Gallant, J., unpublished data.

NAMES

NAMES

Common name: Blue shark, blue whaler, great blue shark.

Mi’kmaw names: Sabbede-mequ, siglati, tan booskekŭlooskăbāwit’, webetŭmâk’, wipitmeqw.

French common names: Requin bleu, requin peau bleue.

Scientific name: Prionace glauca — Prionace: Greek, prion = saw + Greek, akis meaning point + Latin, glaucas = bluish gray.

Order – Carcharhiniformes
Family – Carcharhinidae
Genus – Prionace
Species – P. glauca

GENERAL DESCRIPTION

GENERAL DESCRIPTION

• Average length of 1.8 to 2.5 metres.
• Dark blue above, bright blue on the sides and white ventral side.
• Long, slim body with long and rounded pectoral fins.
• Asymmetrical caudal fin (tail) with larger top lobe.
• Often accompanied by pilot fish.
• Most common pelagic shark in Atlantic Canada.
• Seasonal presence in Atlantic Canada and Quebec. Rare in the Estuary.

1.8 to 2.5 m in Atlantic Canada and Québec

Teeth are large, triangular and serrated unlike any other shark species in the St. Lawrence.
JAWS
Pectoral fins are very long, usually measuring the same length as the distance from its snout to the last gill slit.
PECTORAL FINS
Contrasting pattern of dark back and flanks with white underside used to ambush seals from below.
COLOUR
Single keel on the caudal peduncle unlike the porbeagle shark which has two.
CAUDAL KEEL
Pilot fish are often observed by blue sharks where they feed on leftovers and ectoparasites.
PILOT FISH

DISTRIBUTION

DISTRIBUTION

The blue shark seasonally enters the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the mouth of the maritime estuary.

(BELOW) Provisional distribution of the blue shark, Prionace glauca, in the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Canada, based on research by the St. Lawrence Shark Observatory. Only select cases are posted to illustrate overall range. This map is updated with new and historical data on an ongoing basis. Map does not include data from the U.S. except borderline cases. To submit additional sightings or captures, please contact us. Click on icons for observation details.

CONSERVATION STATUS

CONSERVATION STATUS

The blue shark (Atlantic population) is listed under special concern species by COSEWIC (Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada).

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In the North Atlantic, the white shark is seasonally present in all of the Maritime provinces, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Québec, including the St. Lawrence.

Shark and seal in New France
by Louis Nicolas circa 1690.

Meet the world's most maligned sea creature, the white shark.

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Misrepresented and misunderstood, sharks play a critical role in North Atlantic ecosystems, but they are under increasing threat due to their unfair reputation, pollution, and a lack of public awareness. Please donate to help us study and protect the sharks of the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Canada before it’s too late.Donations to ORS, an all-volunteer charitable not-for-profit organisation, are tax deductible in Canada. Canada Revenue Agency #834462913RR0001

DONATE

“Fear and indifference bite deeper than any shark.”— Jeffrey Gallant, St. Lawrence Shark ObservatoryTax deductible in Canada
CRA #834462913RR0001
DONATE
Misrepresented and misunderstood, sharks play a critical role in North Atlantic ecosystems, but they are under increasing threat due to their unfair reputation, pollution, and a lack of public awareness. Please donate to help us study and protect the sharks of the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Canada before it’s too late.Donations to ORS, an all-volunteer charitable not-for-profit organisation, are tax deductible in Canada. Canada Revenue Agency #834462913RR0001

DONATE

“Fear and indifference bite deeper than any shark.”— Jeffrey Gallant, St. Lawrence Shark ObservatoryTax deductible in Canada
CRA #834462913RR0001
DONATE