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A 10-foot aggressive shark sighting has led to the postponement of the Vans Jack's Surfboards Pro competition in Huntington Beach. Authorities are monitoring the waters and hope to reopen the area by Friday afternoon.
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The World Surf League postponed competition at Huntington Beach this week following the sighting of a large, aggressive shark. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)
Officials in Huntington Beach postponed a major surf contest Thursday after spotting an aggressively large 10-foot shark in the ocean. Authorities are currently monitoring the waters for the "all clear" to reopen the area Friday afternoon.
The 8th annual Vans Jack's Surfboards Pro, a World Surf League Qualifying Series 4,000-level event, draws a large crowd of spectators and surf enthusiasts to the five-day competition and festival.
On Thursday, after the event ended for the day, a shark was spotted off lifeguard tower No. 3, located on the southern-most edge of the beach, said Trevor McDonald, Marine Safety Division Chief for the Huntington Beach Fire Department.
The species of the shark is unknown.
Aggressive shark behavior includes circling, charging and gaping in the waters.
"When you have that combination where you have a larger shark, and you observe aggressive behavior, we take precaution and implemented a 24-hour water closure," he said.
The surf competition was postponed due to the sighting of a large, aggressive 10-foot shark in the ocean.
Authorities are monitoring the waters and expect to reopen the area by Friday afternoon.
The Vans Jack's Surfboards Pro is an 8th annual World Surf League Qualifying Series 4,000-level event that attracts many spectators and surf enthusiasts.
The shark was spotted off lifeguard tower No. 3, located on the southern-most edge of Huntington Beach.

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If officials, in partnership with World Surf League, do not see any additional shark activity Friday, they anticipate reopening the beach at 4:30 p.m.
"The safety of our surfers and staff is our top priority, and in accordance with Huntington Beach City Protocol, the event will remain on hold for 24 hours," said Brian Robbins, World Surf League Tour Manager. "Competition will resume once the water safety team and local authorities confirm the competition area is clear."
The city's Marine Safety Division has staff on jet skis and lifeguard boats to help secure the water and montior for any more shark activity during the current closure, McDonald said.
"We also have drones that we've been able to put up in the air to have an aerial view, and we're working with our Huntington Beach Police Department and their police helicopter so we can continue with monitoring the area," he said.
Spotting the 10-foot shark isn't a typical sighting for the local Marine Safety Division.
"We do sometimes see smaller juvenile sharks, and when you just have a small juvenile shark under eight feet that's not showing any type of aggressive behavior, that doesn't trigger a close like this," McDonald said. "We only have the closures triggered when we see above eight feet combined with that aggressive behavior."
The next call for surfers in the competition will be Saturday at 6:30 a.m., with a possible 7:00 a.m. start.
This recent shark sighting is on par with what Long Beach Shark Lab Director Chris Lowe predicted would be a "very sharky summer," caused by a shift in warmer temperatures that start much earlier in the year.
In March, an 8-foot great white was spotted circling a surfer in Newport Beach, which prompted an immediate shutdown of the shoreline.
Another sighting and shark rescue occurred in April when a fisherman in Hermosa Beach freed a juvenile great white shark caught on a fishing line.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.