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Whales, great white shark recently captured on video near Miami stun fishermen

Great white shark, whales spotted off South Florida's coast
Great white shark, whales spotted off South Florida's coast 02:58

Recent fish and marine mammal sightings caught on video off the coast of South Florida have some longtime fishermen stunned—and, in at least one case, some local researchers shocked.

Video shows great white shark near the Florida Keys

In January, James Paskiewicz captured video of a great white shark when he was out on the water near the Keys. He said the encounter lasted for several minutes and the large fish seemed incredibly curious.

"It's wonderful. I mean, it's just, I'm totally fascinated by sharks and you know, as it's basically a dream come true," Paskiewicz said.

University of Miami researchers with the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science said great whites are like snowbirds seeking warmth. They migrate through the Atlantic Ocean to get to the Gulf. 

"They like somewhat deeper water than a lot of our fishermen spend most of their time in. They are a pretty rare sight but that doesn't mean they are not present. It just means we don't see them all that often," Dr. Catherine Macdonald said.

Macdonald is an interdisciplinary environmental scientist and research assistant professor at UM. She is also the director of the university's shark research and conservation program.

Whales make an appearance south of Miami Beach 

In December 2024, Ryan Preston spotted a majestic sight when he was working in Biscayne Bay — a humpback whale breaching the water. 

 "I've never seen a humpback and I don't know anybody that's seen a humpback off of South Florida," he said. "They were usually way offshore in between, you know, halfway in between Miami and the Bahamas, not in 50 feet of water, you know, on top of a reef." 

Dr. Maria Cartolano, a lecturer at the Rosenstiel School in the Marine Biology and Ecology Department, said humpback whales are found in all major oceans.

"Seeing humpback whales in Miami is really rare but it is possible," Cartolano said. "They will actually make migrations from the very northern North Atlantic all the way down to the Caribbean and they will do that to come to the warmer waters to breed." 

However, the mammal's close proximity to shore has raised some questions.

"It could just be that they are interested and that they wanted to come closer to shore. It's just not fully understood," Cartolano said.

Gray whale spotted near Sunny Isles Beach 

There is one recent sighting that has some scientists baffled. Captain Abie Raymond could not believe his eyes when he spotted a gray whale last winter near Sunny Isles Beach. 

"It's only a 26 ft boat, so that 40 or 50 foot whale just dwarfed us when it went underneath it. It really just humbled us," Raymond said. 

It was a stunning sight, according to Cartolano, because gray whales were hunted to near extinction in the 1700s and have not been seen in the Atlantic for hundreds of years.

"So that may be due to climate, just in that they are now able to make their way through passages when there's less sea ice in certain seasons to be able to access the Atlantic ocean again," she said. 

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