Scientists Concerned About The Recent Shark Attacks – Wall Street Hedge
People surround and attend to a 68-year-old man who was bitten by a shark in waist-deep water off Ocracoke Island, N.C., on July 1.
There’s no obvious explanation for the uptick in attacks.
Sixty-eight-year-old Andrew Costello said Thursday the attack was frightening and painful, and he’s focused on recovering. Cahoon said theories of what’s attracting the sharks fall short.
Rip currents are also a huge concern this holiday weekend. To make matters worse along Virginia Beach’s North End, two weeks ago a menhaden fishing operation by Omega Protein spilled thousands of dead fish off of Cape Henry, where the mess was caught up in the tide line to the delight of dolphin, rays and sharks. A sheriff’s office is also flying a helicopter along the shore to see if sharks can be spotted. There were 76 attacks observed, in which, 5 people lost their lives.
Don’t go in the water with an open wound, sharks can smell and taste even the smallest amount of blood from over 1.6 km away and trace it back to its source.
“We can never guarantee anyone’s safety when they enter the water”, David Hallac, NPS’s superintendent of parks on the Outer Banks, said in a statement.
Should you be unlucky enough to encounter a shark in the water, what should you do?
The number of shark attacks this year has already broken records. Halfway into the year and North Carolina alone has witnessed at least 6 shark attacks, according to George Burgess, the director of the Shark Attack. Korman said the shark was about six-and-a-half feet long. He added that this was the real deal.
Burgess said it would be a mistake to start rounding up sharks.
Despite Larsen’s violent incident and the group of young great whites that have been hanging around the cement ship Palo Alto at Seacliff State Beach near Aptos, shark attacks are rare around the Monterey Bay.
“Right now there is a situation that seems a little more volatile and we should take increased caution”, Burgess said. Sharks like warm, salty water the most, he said.
“The reality is that for every person killed by a shark, 10 million sharks are being killed by humans”, Burgess said.
“It was a pretty large bite – but it didn’t do any tearing”, she told ABC News. Dunlap Marine Conservation Program.
As beaches gain popularity for tourists, they become more likely targets for attacks. Last year there were four bites in the whole year and in 2013 there was only one. And it’s easier to believe that the reason there have been no deaths is because the often-brave people trying to fight off the sharks in the water are actually winning. In addition, some of the shark encounters have been notable for their severity and proximity to one another. Are they beholden to the shark lobby to the detriment of all humanity? Lifeguards on duty are saying sharks aren’t the biggest danger this weekend.