Bangkok Post

‘Fluffy’ the shark returns to sea

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SYDNEY: A baby great white shark that stunned onlookers when it washed up on a popular Sydney beach was released back into the ocean yesterday after spending the night in an aquarium.

The thrashing 1.5-metre animal, nicknamed “Fluffy” by marine experts, came ashore at busy Manly beach on Monday.

“When you see a real-life shark, it’s scary,” said Dan Korocz, who was at the beach with his young family.

“I’ve got a four-year-old and a twoyear-old and we went down to the water’s edge and then it came in.”

Several attempts were made to immediatel­y return the injured shark to the sea by staff from the nearby Manly Sea Life Sanctuary, but it kept coming back to land.

The Sea Life team then put the creature in a sling and carried it to a nearby rock pool — attracting crowds of curious onlookers — while they worked out what to do.

They later took the shark to the sanctuary, where its health was assessed and it made a good recovery overnight, said the centre’s senior aquarist Robbie McCracken.

“Fluffy” was finally released into the open ocean after being loaded into a tank of water on a boat yesterday.

“This animal is better suited to recovery out in its environmen­t,” Mr McCracken said, adding it was “extremely rare” for a shark to beach itself.

“These great white sharks usually are animals that would tend to be offshore a bit, out in the deeper, more unrestrict­ed waters.

“This one found its way up into the beaches of Manly and then into the surf zone. That is where we were able to step in and sort of intervene.”

 ?? AFP ?? Staff from Manly Sea Life Sanctuary carry a 1.5-metre-long juvenile great white shark to a boat to be released in Sydney.
AFP Staff from Manly Sea Life Sanctuary carry a 1.5-metre-long juvenile great white shark to a boat to be released in Sydney.

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