It is taken almost exclusively by commercial longline fishermen. Fishing methods include trolling with whole tuna, mullet, squid, mackerel, or lures, and also chumming or live bait fishing with similar baits. Many are hooked incidentally while trolling for marlins. The flesh is excellent and said to be similar to swordfish. The following are fishing methods used to catch this fish:
Makos have a streamlined, well proportioned body and a conical pointed snout. The longfin mako has a blunter snout and a larger eye than the shortfin and much longer pectoral fins. There is a large, prominent, flattened keel on either side of the caudal peduncle. It can be easily distinguished from all other sharks by its teeth, which are like curved daggers with no cusps at the base or serrations along the razor sharp edges. The front surface is flat and the teeth are curved inward. The back of the shortfin mako is a brilliant blue-gray or cobalt blue and the sides are light blue, changing to snowy white on the belly including the lower jaw. The longfin mako is also blue above with light blue sides, and is white below except for the jaw. In real life encounters, the mako’s colors are the most strikingly beautiful of all the mackerel sharks. After death the colors fade to grayish brown.Makos have been implicated in attacks on humans and are the undisputed leader in attacks on boats. A hooked mako will immediately unleash all its fury, reportedly leaping as high as 30 ft out of the water. It may roll, shake, dive, and charge the boat. It has also been known to bite the boat and occasionally to leap into it, causing severe injuries to the angler and wreaking havoc inside the boat.