“…Whale sharks strand occasionally on beaches in southern Africa (Wosnick et al, 2022) and more rarely in Australia (Speed et al, 2009) and other localities (Sampaio et al, 2018;Whitehead et al, 2019), but access to these sharks is complicated by the very unpredictable timing of strandings and the sometimes remote coastlines where it occurs. Whale sharks are also taken by fisheries in Asia, although in many cases access to these sharks can be complicated by the legal status of these industries (Nijman, 2023). Reproductive and some general sonographic anatomy has been reported in several other captive and wild species of sharks, mostly using restraint (Walsh et al, 1993;Carrier et al, 2003;Daly et al, 2007;Tomita et al, 2019), and there is a comprehensive description of anatomy of the banded houndshark (Triakis scyllium) imaged by CT and MRI (Kim et al, 2021), however there is no published data on the abdominal anatomy of the whale shark.…”