The New Zealand Herald

Surfer uses board to fend off shark

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A man has used his surfboard to fend off a shark that bit him on his calf off an Australian beach two days after a fatal attack on the Great Barrier Reef.

The 43-year-old surfer was bitten yesterday at Shelly Beach off Ballina in New South Wales state.

Ballina Shire Mayor David Wright said the surfer described the shark as about 1.5m long. Wright told Sydney’s 2GB radio that the man came ashore, wrapped his leg and went to the hospital for treatment of a 20cm wound.

Beaches in the area were expected to be closed for at least 24 hours.

On Monday, a shark killed a man in an island harbour in the Whitsunday Islands where two tourists were mauled in September.

The victim, 33-year-old doctor Daniel Christidis, had been diving into the water from a paddle board while on a yacht cruise in the idyllic Whitsunday­s. Police Inspector Steve O’Connell said the group included other doctors who worked to save him but Christidis was injured too severely.

The spate of attacks in the Whitsunday­s has left authoritie­s struggling to explain an apparent escalation in danger in the internatio­nally renowned vacation destinatio­n. In September two Australian tourists were mauled on consecutiv­e days, one a 12-year-old girl who lost a leg.

Daniel Gschwind, chief executive of the Queensland Tourism Industry Council, which represents more than 3000 tourism businesses, said on Tuesday that authoritie­s were examining why the unpreceden­ted series of attacks had occurred and whether environmen­tal changes were a factor. “We need to now have the scientific background and investigat­ion of what is causing this sudden spike of attacks and interactio­ns with sharks. We simply do not know why this is occurring and what is responsibl­e for it,” Gschwind said.

Authoritie­s killed six sharks in the Cid Harbour area in a week following the September attacks to reduce their numbers.

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