.
Fishing for sport Mako fishing is a prominent activity around the world. As one of the fastest species in the ocean, they offer acrobatic flips, fast runs, and strong fights, which all greatly entertains anglers. Traditionally, the sharks are hooked through the use of
chum and baitcasters; however,
fly fishing for them has become more popular, particularly in
San Diego,
California, where one of the three known worldwide mako rookeries is located. A cottage industry of fishing in this
rookery has emerged, specifically catch-and-release, with charter operations out of
Mission Bay. For many years, many commercial boats hunted them for restaurant catch, but through the efforts of many local fishing companies and national organizations (such as Orvis), this has been curbed.
Captivity Of all recorded attempts to keep
pelagic shark species in
captivity, the shortfin mako shark has fared the poorest, even more so than the
blue shark and the
great white shark. At
SeaWorld San Diego, a shortfin mako shark ability test failed in the early 1970s. The current record is held by a specimen kept at the
New Jersey Aquarium for only five days in 2001. Like past attempts at keeping
Isurus in captivity, the animal appeared strong on arrival, but had trouble negotiating the walls of the aquarium, refused to feed, quickly weakened, and died.
Attacks on humans ISAF statistics records 10 shortfin mako shark
attacks on humans between 1980 and 2024, three of which were fatal, along with 20 boat attacks. Many attacks involving shortfin mako sharks are considered to have been provoked due to harassment or the shark being caught on a fishing line. Divers who have encountered shortfin mako note that prior to an attack, they swim in a figure-eight pattern and approach with mouths open.
In popular culture As one of the more recognizable species of shark, the shortfin mako shark has appeared in various works of fiction. A large shortfin mako shark appears in the 1952
Ernest Hemingway novella
The Old Man and the Sea, taking a bite of the titular old man's prized marlin before he kills it with a
harpoon. Although the species is only mentioned in passing in the actual film, the shortfin mako perhaps most famously features as the shark on the poster of the 1975 film
Jaws — artist
Roger Kastel painted the shark on the poster based on reference photographs taken of a
taxidermized shortfin mako shark exhibited at the
American Museum of Natural History.
Genetically modified shortfin mako sharks notably feature as the antagonists of the 1999 science fiction horror film
Deep Blue Sea. A
vegetarian shortfin mako shark named Chum appears in the 2003 animated film
Finding Nemo. Mutated shortfin mako sharks also serve as antagonists in the 2024 action-horror film
Under Paris. Shortfin mako sharks have also appeared prominently in several
video games, such as
Zoo Tycoon: Marine Mania, the
Hungry Shark series of mobile games, and
Depth. ==Conservation==