We made surveys for whale sharks Rhincodon typus on a total of 99 d from April through June each year from 2006 to 2008 along the southern fringe of the South Ari Atoll, Maldives Archipelago. We recorded the length and sex of each shark observed and made photographs to facilitate repeated identification from their spot patterns using pattern-recognition software. We identified 64 whale sharks from digital photographs taken during 220 sightings over 3 yr. Approx. 87% of those sharks were immature males. The average length of recognisable sharks was 5.98 m (range 2.5 to 10.5 m), significantly shorter than that reported for whale sharks in other aggregations in the Indian Ocean. Our findings suggest that these sharks are either a small proportion of a local population or perhaps an even smaller component of a regional population in the western Indian Ocean. We applied a Lincoln-Petersen closed-population mark-recapture model and a Jolly-Seber openpopulation model to estimate population size, but found that neither model provided reliable results because key assumptions of each were not met.
Superficial dermal wounds in whale sharks are reported to heal rapidly as with many other elasmobranchs. Here observations of two wounded whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) in Maldivian waters suggest that free ranging sharks are able to recover and rapidly heal from the effects of deeper wounding on internal organs or amputations. One specimen observed impaled by a wooden harpoon shaft, was subsequently re-encountered nearly a year later. The other suffered a near severed first dorsal fin but showed signs of rapid healing. These observations illustrate that despite national bans in whale sharks fishing, the practise persists in the Maldives. Further research to increase understanding of the demography of aggregations of this species is necessary before the impact of illegal exploitation on regional population trends can be determined. National governments are encouraged to enhance marine conservation outreach and education programmes throughout their territories.
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