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Baby Shark Attack

April 30th, 2009
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Source: couriermail.com.au

SYDNEY beach goers have been warned for months now that swimming near baitfish increases your chance of being attacked by a shark.

A tourist in Malaysia obviously hasn’t been told of the advice. 

She jumped in the water to surround herself with little fish at Pulau Payar in Malaysia while friends attracted the minnows with bread crusts. 

See what happened when a baby shark turned up and decided there was something better than bread to be scoffed.

http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,25202354-5013016,00.html

Shark Attack

French Surfer Mangled By Shark in New Caledonia

April 30th, 2009
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Source: surftherenow.com

A 19-year-old French surfer was killed by a shark today as he surfed off New Caledonia in the southwest Pacific. The surfer’s arm was torn off and his leg bitten as he tried to board a boat with his friend. The man’s friend managed to get him to shore, but he was dead by the time emergency workers reached him.

The surfer, who was studying in the New Caledonia capital, Noumea, died shortly after being transported to shore. It is not known what type of shark was responsible.

The incident took place in an area popular with surfers and was the first fatal shark attack in the territory since September 2007, when a young nurse was killed.

Shark Attack

Teenage surfer, 15, is latest shark victim off Sydney beach

April 30th, 2009
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Source: MailOnline

A shark badly injured a 15-year-old boy while he was surfing with his father off a Sydney beach yesterday.

Andrew Lindop was surfing with his father Charles at North Avalon beach when he became the third shark attack victim in the area in as many weeks. In one of the previous attacks a navy diver lost an arm and a leg. 

Marine experts believe environmental protection in the Sydney harbour area has created a cleaner environment which is attracting sharks closer to shore as they chase fish.

The teenager was flown by helicopter to hospital to be treated for leg injuries.

Police said the bites ‘cut through to the bone’ but the teenager did not appear to have sustained any fractures.

Doctors at the Royal North Shore Hospital operated on Andrew and was said to be recovering well from surgery.

‘Doctors are very happy with the results,’ a hospital spokesman said. ‘He’s resting comfortably in a satisfactory condition.’

Andrew and his father were in the waters off Avalon beach on Sydney’s popular northern beaches at 6.45am when he was attacked.

‘The father heard a scream and turned to see his son thrashing about in the water,’ a police spokesman said. ‘Fortunately the shark swam away and the boy was helped to shore by his father.’

Back on the beach Mr Lindop, an Avalon Beach Surf Life Saving Club senior patrol captain, tied a tourniquet around his son’s leg before paramedics arrived.

Police closed several beaches after the attack. Officers and lifeguards were searching for the shark, hoping to identify its species by the shape of the bite marks.

Many shark species live in the waters off Sydney’s beaches, but attacks on humans are still relatively rare.

However, there were two attacks on successive days last month, one on a Navy diver in Sydney harbour and another on a surfer at the city’s world-famous Bondi beach.

Fishermen say shark numbers are on the rise. Many shark species, including the Great White, are protected in Australian waters.

Shark Attack

2008 shark attack report released

February 19th, 2009
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Source: winknews.com

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Shark attacks worldwide dipped last year to their lowest level in five years.

University of Florida shark researcher George Burgess says there were 59 attacks in 2008, compared to 71 in 2007. He attributes the decline to economy and fewer people going to the beach.

There were four fatal attacks last year, an average number, compared with only one in 2007, which marked a two-decade low. Two of the deaths were in Mexico, one was in Australia and one was in the United States.

Burgess is an ichthyologist and director of the International Shark Attack File, which is housed at the University of Florida.

Shark Attack

Surfer’s arm shredded in the first shark attack off Bondi Beach since 1929

February 18th, 2009
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Source: dailymail.co.uk

A surfer’s arm was shredded by a shark off Australia’s Bondi Beach - the first attack at the popular tourist spot for 80 years.

The 33-year-old man, whose name was not released, suffered severe arm injuries, police said. Other surfers helped him to shore, where volunteers helped to stop his bleeding.

The man underwent a 10-hour surgery at St. Vincent’s Hospital, and was in serious but stable condition, hospital spokesman David Faktor said.

‘We could see all of his bones cut like with a big knife. It was very clear,’ French tourist Mikael Thomas, 21, said.

Lifeguards sounded the beach’s shark alarm and cleared the water. Surfer James McIntosh, 29, said he tied a leg rope around the victim’s arm as a tourniquet.

‘I just kept pulling that leg rope as hard as I could. As soon as we put the tourniquet on there wasn’t any bleeding,’ he added.

On Wednesday, a Navy diver lost his hand after fighting off a shark in Sydney Harbour, not far from the Opera House. His leg was also badly mauled.

A recent string of shark attacks across Australia has left some swimmers jittery. 

In December, 51-year-old Brian Guest vanished while snorkeling with his son off a beach in Western Australia. A piece of his wet suit was later found, and officials said he was almost certainly eaten by a shark.

Last month, a 13-year-old surfer in the island state of Tasmania was dragged under water by a 16-foot great white shark, and a 31-year-old surfer was bitten while surfing at a remote beach in New South Wales state the same day. Both survived.

The following day, a shark latched onto the leg of a snorkeler in southern New South Wales. The man survived after pummeling the creature with his fists until the shark let go.

Most experts agree the cluster of attacks is a freak coincidence and say there is no evidence of an increase in the country’s shark population. 

Nevertheless, some have argued that cleaner, nutrient-rich waters have boosted the animals’ reproduction and drawn them into shallow waters.

Although sharks are often spotted off Australia’s beaches, fatal attacks are rare. 

On average, just one person is killed by a shark in Australia each year, according to the Australian Shark Attack File database.

Shark Attack

Diver to lose leg after shark attack

February 18th, 2009
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Source: sbs.com.au

A Navy diver who lost his hand after being attacked by a shark in Sydney Harbour says he is about to have his leg amputated, but is looking forward to rebuilding his life and career.

Navy clearance diver Able Seaman Paul de Gelder was mauled while working between HMAS Kuttabul navy base at Garden Island and Mrs Macquarie’s Chair about dawn last Wednesday. 

The 31-year-old was taking part in an underwater trial to test new naval defence technology when what is believed to have been a bull shark attacked him.

“I will today have my right leg amputated,” Mr de Gelder said in a statement released through the defence department on Wednesday.

He said the past week had been overwhelming, and he would not have survived without the support of numerous people.

Mr de Gelder described his colleagues and mates Leading Seaman Clearance Diver Jeremy Thomas, Able Seaman Clearance Diver Ryan Dart and Seaman Clearance Diver Arthur McLachlin as “a couple of heroes”.

Hopes for career

“(They) pulled me out of the water and saved me from what I understand was a three metre Bull Shark,” he said.

He also offered his thanks to the paramedics “who got me to the hospital within an inch of my life”, as well as the doctors and staff of St Vincent’s Hospital.

He said that his family, friends and workmates had shown him limitless support since the attack.

“During this stressful time, they are keeping a smile on my face and love in my heart.

“I’m looking forward to rebuilding my life and taking on the new challenges I have to face.

“Ultimately I would like to return to what I love - Navy diving.”

Thanks for support

He praised the Royal Australian Navy for its support, and said there were too many others to thank them by name.

“There are so many people who have sent their best wishes and support that I couldn’t possibly name them all, but each of them have helped me to rise above this potentially life shattering situation and I thank them all.”

A spokesman for St Vincents Hospital said Mr de Gelder remained in a stable condition in the hospital’s Naval ward.

The shark attack was the first of two in Sydney last week.

A 33-year-old man, named in the media as Glenn Orgias, was savaged by a shark while surfing at the iconic Bondi Beach at dusk last Thursday.

His hand was almost severed in an attack and he also remains in a stable condition in St Vincent’s Hospital.

Shark Attack

Navy diver Paul Degelder attacked by shark in Sydney Harbour

February 18th, 2009
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Source: timesonline.co.uk

A Royal Australian Navy clearance diver is in hospital after being mauled by a shark in Sydney Harbour on Wednesday morning.

Able Seaman Paul Degelder was taking part in an anti-terrorism exercise in waters alongside the Navy’s fleet base at Garden Island, near Woolloomooloo in Sydney’s inner-east, when he was attacked on the hand and thigh by what is believed to have been a 10ft bull shark.

The 31-year-old, who was in the water with a police diver, managed to punch the shark a few times and then swim to a safety boat nearby. The attack, which happened on the surface of the water and was over in a matter of seconds, occurred within sight of the popular harbourside tourist lookout at Mrs Macquarie’s Chair and the Sydney Opera House.

Medical sailors from a nearby ship came to his aid and immediately called emergency services who transferred him to a local hospital where he had emergency surgery.

Australian Fleet Commander Rear Admiral Nigel Coates told The Times that Able Seaman Degelder is still in a “very serious condition” but would not divulge his exact injuries, or confirm reports that he may lose his hand.

An ambulance spokesman confirmed his hand had been partially severed, and Admiral Coates admitted Able Seaman Degelder’s injuries could end his career.

“He’s not going to die, but he has got some serious injuries that will take some time to get over,” Admiral Coates told The Times.

The Navy immediately suspended the diving operation, which was part of an underwater trial to test new naval defence technology, while boats searched for the shark.

Admiral Coates said Able Seaman Degelder was a “very popular” member of the Navy and the attack had shaken up his fellow personnel, some of whom had received counselling.

“Some of his mates are with him in hospital, along with his family,” he told The Times.

Able Seaman Degelder has been a member of the Royal Australian Navy for eight years since transferring from the Army. He is a member of Australian Clearance Dive Team One, based at HMAS Penguin in Sydney’s northern suburbs and described by Admiral Coates as a “keen and enthusiastic diver”.

Today’s attack is the first time a shark has mauled a member of the Royal Australian Navy, which will hold an inquiry into the incident and review diving operational procedures.

Jacob Ruru told Sydney’s Daily Telegraph newspaper that on Tuesday evening he saw a “3.5 to 4 metre bull shark chasing and leaping out of the water after bait fish” while he was fishing in the harbour at Mort Bay near Leichhardt in Sydney’s inner-west.

While sharks are commonly sighted in Sydney Harbour, an attack is very rare and there have only been 43 shark attacks over the past 200 years.

The last shark attack in the harbour was at Atol Bay, near Taronga Zoo on Sydney’s north shore. The last fatal shark attack in the harbour occurred in 1963 when Martha Hathaway was killed by a bull shark at Middle Harbour.

Shark expert John West said Bull sharks, which can grow up to 12ft, are one of the more “aggressive” shark species.

He said while bull sharks are “quite capable of taking chunks out of people”, this attack probably occurred because Able Seaman Degelder had inadvertently entered the shark’s personal territory.

“It seems to me this shark probably reacted to a perceived threat by the diver,” Mr West said.

“But it’s a rare occurrence. Sharks are in the harbour, but they are not out there eating people left, right and centre.”

While there are no statistics on the shark population in Sydney Harbour, a spokesman for the NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change said regenerated sea life had most likely attracted more of the predators to the waters.

“As the harbour gets healthier and less polluted, the numbers of fish are likely to improve and so you may also have sharks attracted to the whole area,” department spokesman John Dengate said.

Shark Attack

Sharks Rampage in Australia

January 12th, 2009
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Source: Time

A surfboard, bitten by a shark in Binalong Bay, near St Helens, Tasmania on January 12, 2009

A surfboard, bitten by a shark in Binalong Bay, near St Helens, Tasmania on January 12, 2009

Swimmers at Australian beaches are usually reassured by statistics that indicate they are more likely to be struck by lightning than chomped by a shark. But, after three non-fatal shark attacks in the country in less than 48 hours and a deadly one last month, some are wondering if the odds have changed — and whether Australia’s efforts to protect sharks are to blame. (Read “When Adventure Tourism Kills.”)

Australia’s summer of shark terror began Dec. 27 when local banker Brian Guest went missing while snorkling off a beach south of Perth in Western Australia. A search located a few tattered pieces of wetsuit belonging to the 51-year-old. Authorities concluded he had been killed by a large white pointer shark spotted near the beach. (See the top 10 animal stories of 2008.)

That attack was followed by several more. On Jan. 11, a man surfing near Fingal Head in northern New South Wales was bitten on the thigh. Jonathon Beard, 31, made it to shore and survived after his friends used the leg rope from his surf board to stem the bleeding.

The same day Hannah Mighall, 13, was surfing in Binalong Bay off the Tasmania coast in Australia’s far south, when she screamed and was dragged under the water by what authorities suspect was a large white pointer. Her cousin paddled to the injured girl and dragged her to safety while being circled by the shark. On Jan. 12, a man snorkeling in a tidal lake in New South Wales was bitten on the leg, probably by a bull shark. Authorities reported the man punched the shark in the nose and made it to shore with about 40 puncture wounds. All of the victims are recovering.

According to records kept by Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney, 193 people have been killed by sharks in Australia over the past 200 years. In recent years, shark deaths in Australian waters have averaged about one per year.

Researchers play down the significance of the unusual spate of attacks. They point out that more people are entering the ocean, increasing the chances of an encounter. “The human population is expanding at a rate of knots,” says Rory McAuley, a senior research scientist with the West Australian Fisheries Department. “Not only is it getting larger, it’s getting more dispersed, so people are getting into the water over a greater area of the shark’s range. It’s probably likely to expect to see an increase in shark sightings and attacks.”

But some fisherman and others complain Australia’s efforts to protect sharks — catching rare white pointer sharks is illegal, for example — is resulting in an increase in attacks. In particular, they object to a policy of letting suspected man-eaters go. “Sharks do hang around after the attack and the government has a duty of care to deal with it,” says Queensland fisherman Vic Hislop. Sharks “learn to kill humans. They learn to go in hard and fast.”

The deadly Dec. 27 attack in West Australia has rekindled this long-running controversy. After Guest, the banker, was killed, a volunteer rescue boat and a rescue helicopter located a shark matching the description of the killer but took no action.

Guest’s family said they did not want the shark harmed. “He (Guest) didn’t want people going out there willy-nilly destroying animals who were just doing what animals do,” said Guest’s son, Daniel, who had been snorkling with his father on the day he went missing. But others were outraged. “The shark had the man in his stomach digesting him and (authorities) are just driving the boat over and around him,” says Hislop, who is an outspoken critic of the government’s preservation policies and runs a tourist shark display featuring models of maneaters on Queensland’s coast.

Hislop and others maintain that sharks develop a taste for people and can be repeat offenders. Says Hugh Edwards, a West Australian author and fisherman who has been filming documentaries on sharks for more than 20 years: “I tend to agree that individual sharks can be responsible for more than one attack.” Edwards suggests that they should be killed, “as long as you know that its definitely the right shark.”

But scientists reject such arguments as ill-informed. “There is no evidence that sharks become repeat attackers,” says McAuley, who heads a shark and ray sustainability program for the Fisheries department. “We have had a number of years between fatal shark attacks in West Australia, which is the clearest indication that sharks don’t learn to predate humans.”

McAuley acknowledges the number of attacks may have increased lately. But he maintains this is not because shark numbers have increased dramatically due to successful preservation programs, as some have argued. White pointer sharks, for example, take 20 years to reach maturity, do not give birth every year and have few offspring. “Any increase would take in the order of decades,” McAuley says.

Australian officials have taken what steps they can to minimize man-shark encounters. The states of Queensland and New South Wales have strung nets off popular surfing beaches to keep sharks out. The Queensland Government says there has not been a fatal attack on a netted beach since they were introduced in the 1960s, but critics say the nets kill turtles, dolphins and sometimes whales. In Victoria, South Australia, West Australia and Tasmania, authorities rely on aerial spotters and lifeguards who alert swimmers when a suspicious shape appears in the surf.

But the attitude of many is: swim at your own risk — and leave the sharks alone. As Guest reportedly wrote on an anglers website before he died: “[Sharks] got a right to be there, we’ve got a right to go there and there are risks associated with everything, but I don’t believe the correct way of reducing our risk is to kill the shark.” Luckily for the sharks, most Australians seem to think the same way.

Shark Attack

Shark attack - blown out of all proportion

December 15th, 2008
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Source: xtremesport4u

This video which comes from Apexpredator11 and was posted in December 2006, sometime ago now, but it made us think of what the statistics are for shark attacks on surfers. Here we should add the word ‘reported’ and this is what we found.

From the Times on line ‘ Last year the only fatal attack was in New Caledonia, in the southwest Pacific, according to the Florida Museum of Natural History’s international shark attack file.

There were 71 other reported attacks worldwide last year, up from 63 in 2006. Attacks on the Atlantic coast, particularly in Florida, are far more common than they are on the Pacific coast.

A study by the Harvard Centre for Risk Analysis showed that a person’s chances of being killed by a shark in any given year are about 1 in 280 million, compared with a 1 in 6,700 chance of being killed in a car accident.

This means you would have to swim in the ocean 112 times a day for it to become as dangerous as making a single car journey to the supermarket. 

As you are no doubt aware there are only four species of shark that are considered to be dangerous: the Great White shark, the Oceanic Whitetip shark, the Bull shark and the Tiger shark. Further research will quickly reveal that the Great White - the most feared of all the sharks, will ‘not deliberately hunt humans for food’.

While sharks kill fewer than 20 people a year, their own numbers suffer greatly at human hands. Between 20 and 100 million sharks die each year due to fishing activity, according to data from the Florida Museum of Natural History’s International Shark Attack File.

So shark attacks are rare and no doubt often caused by foolish behaviour from an individual  - take for example the Meditterranean where Europe holidays and yes, the Great White has been seen in the Med - some even suggest it is their breeding ground - since 1899  MEDSAF reports (the Mediterranean Shark Attack File) that only some 60 attacks have been reported - no doubt in this respect it is a good thing that the Med does not have any surf!

Great White, Shark Attack