Lethbridge Herald

Nova Scotia on shark watch

GREAT WHITE SHARK’S TRAVELS CAPTIVATE NOVA SCOTIANS: ‘SAY HELLO IF YOU SEE ME’

- Rob Roberts

He was first detected July 30 in the cold, dark waters off Shelburne, near Nova Scotia’s southwest tip.

He turned up a week later in Mahone Bay and has hovered around there since, near some of the province’s most popular beaches and tourist towns — even brushing by the famous Peggy’s Cove in neighbouri­ng St. Margaret’s Bay.

Hilton — a 600-kilogram shark tagged by the research group Ocearch in March in South Carolina — announces his movements on a Twitter feed that is part science, part mischief and followed by thousands of people.

The highly visible great white, here to feast on an abundance of seals, has kept some Nova Scotians out of the water, but captivated many others.

A man tweeted a photo of shark-shaped pizzas he’d baked for his kids; a woman shared a photo of a possible sighting near Queensland beach, making it clear she was hopeful rather than fearful. Another man tweeted a photo of himself kayaking, saying: “I was ... looking for you.”

“I’m not sure what I’m more excited for, the new (Game of Thrones) episode or the next @HiltonTheS­hark update,” Halifax graphic designer Gregory Dubeau tweeted.

Hilton has pinged seven times in August from a tracker on his dorsal fin, which only sends signals when it breaks the surface, says Ocearch founder and expedition leader Chris Fischer.

Hilton — or more precisely, an Ocearch staffer assuming his identity — tweeted about the pings, along with wisecracks about “yummy” seals and donairs and a mild flirtation with another tagged shark with a Twitter feed, Savannah, who herself made at least a brief visit to Nova Scotia this month.

“Obsessed with where they pop up next!” one woman tweeted.

On Saturday, Hilton surfaced again near Heckman’s Island near Lunenburg, offering a wave emoji: “Say hello if you see me,” he tweeted.

Fischer said Ocearch is keen for the social media conversati­on, and tries to “amplify” it. Four decades after the release of “Jaws” and its long shadow over the shark brand, the group made a conscious decision to be playful.

“We needed to shift the tone of the conversati­on around sharks, so people loved up on them like we love up on our big cats, because they perform the same role in the ecosystem, and I think people are getting that,” he said from Long Island, N.Y., where he had just tagged a baby white shark.

Fischer said the great whites are the “balance keepers” of a range reaching from Newfoundla­nd to Florida — like big predatory cats on land, with effects on many other species.

“If the white sharks aren’t there, the seals can just go out and scavenge the entire region at their leisure and tend to wipe out shellfish population­s and a lot of fish we count on as food sources.”

“People understand now that if we don’t have a lot of big sharks in the ocean, our kids aren’t going to eat fish. And our industries aren’t going to be managed sustainabl­y, because they’re just so fundamenta­lly important as the apex predator.”

The Atlantic White Shark Conservanc­y says little is known about where sharks travel, pup and feed, and Fischer’s group aims to solve that puzzle of shark behaviour.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? A shark known as “Hilton” is seen in this undated handout photo.
Canadian Press photo A shark known as “Hilton” is seen in this undated handout photo.

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