THIS is the jaw-dropping moment a massive shark was accidentally caught by fisherman in Spain.
The 22ft beast was hauled out of the water in the country’s north-eastern Catalonia region.
X/324.catThe 22ft beast was hauled out of the water in Spain[/caption]
X/324.catIts tail is pictured tangled in a net[/caption]
x/@crampressThe gargantuan creature was found in Port de la Selva[/caption]
Basking sharks are listed as a protected species by authorities.
It meant the startled fisherman had to alert the area’s marine life foundation – CRAM – once he realised what he had caught.
He brought it ashore to Port de la Selva – about two hours drive northeast of Barcelona – where experts found out it was a female shark.
CRAM made clear the capture was accidental and that the fisherman had “immediately” alerted them.
A video showing the heart-stopping moment it reached dry land has been shared widely on social media.
The clip, seen more than 150,000 times on X, shows onlookers crowded around the vast creature as it is brought to shore.
What appears to be a fishing net can be seen tangled around the shark’s tail fins.
The shark had entered the fisherman’s net and got “coiled tighter” as it tried to escape, sources told Europa Press.
It was dead by the time it reached port.
The fisherman had followed all protocols, the source added.
CRAM researchers have taken samples from the shark to find out more about her.
Basking sharks are the second largest type of fish in the world – and the largest found in the Mediterranean Sea.
The whopping creatures can often be spotted swimming around the coast of England.
Despite their huge size and intimidating wide mouth, basking sharks are not aggressive towards humans and mostly feed off plankton.
The incident comes after another terrifying shark catch in North Carolina, where seven fishermen had to wrestle a great white shark back into the water.
It took them 35 minutes after catching the beast before they were able to release it.
The fisherman who shared the footage said: “It’s breathtaking seeing a 12-to-13-foot, 1,400-to-1,800-pound animal jump out of the water on the hook set.
“There have been a few great whites caught in North Carolina. None of them have been as big as that one.”
Great white sharks are considerably more dangerous to humans than basking sharks despite their smaller size.
However, the chances of being seriously hurt in a shark attack are low.
Just 47 people being injured in unprovoked shark attacks in 2024, the lowest level in nearly 30 years.
Basking shark facts
The creatures are gentle giants of the oceans and despite their mammoth size intimidating some people, they live on a diet of plankton
They undertake large migrations and can be found worldwide in both temperate and tropical waters
Scotland has some of the richest cold waters in the world. Each spring, oceanic temperatures and weather cycles create optimal conditions for explosive blooms of plankton
Their large mouths can be up to one metre wide and are lined with gill rakers, which are specially adapted filters for straining out plankton
The largest recorded length of a basking shark is 12.27m – more than 40ft