Study authors pointed out that a "similar regional increase in white shark numbers in the US Economic Exclusive Zone of the northwest Atlantic showed a recovery towards early historical numbers," citing a 2014 study that forecast an optimistic outlook to white shark recovery in the Atlantic.

"While there are no historic baselines of white shark abundance that preclude management policies implemented in 1994 in the Pacific northeast, the results of this study suggest recent favorable management in California (including marine mammal protection, and white shark bycatch mitigation) may be contributing to a pathway for the positive population growth for this important marine top predator," the 2021 study authors wrote. 

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"Given the vulnerable life history traits of white sharks, insuring their future will take a continued effort to monitor populations and identify potential future threats such as climate change and unregulated high-seas fisheries," they said.

The sharks can grow up to 20 feet in length, weigh more than 2,000 pounds and live for up to 70 years.

"Losing just a few animals can be really critical to the larger population," the study's lead author Paul Kanive, of Montana State University, said in the release. "It’s important that we continue to protect them and their surroundings."