Externally and internally implanted sonic transmitters were used to track t
he movements of eight tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) ranging between 200
and 417 cm total length (TL), captured by hook-and-line on the south coast
of Oahu, Hawaii, between 1993 and 1997. Attachment of the transmitters was
facilitated by the fact that captured sharks exhibited tonic immobility whe
n restrained and inverted at the side of the tagging vessel. Three common t
hemes emerged from the horizontal movements of the tracked sharks: (1) offs
hore movements away from the island, (2) extended periods of directed, "str
aight-line" swimming, (3) orientation to the Penguin Banks - a shallow bank
located similar or equal to 35 km from the release point. In shallow water
(<300 m) the sharks swam predominantly close to the bottom, in open water
(>300 m)they swam within the mixed layer at depths of similar to 80 m. One
shark dove briefly to 335 m. The average estimated swimming speed of sharks
traversing open water was 0.29 body length (BL) s(-1). Two sharks were rec
aptured after termination of the tracks; one of these sharks was recaptured
twice, with a total time at liberty of 377 d. The data suggest that Hawaii
an tiger sharks move within large home ranges and that they can efficiently
navigate between distant parts of their range, even when this requires cro
ssing open ocean waters.