The Independent on Saturday

Sharks take a bite out of Oz tourism

Coastal attacks prompt nets

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ASERIES of shark attacks off Australia’s north-east coast has given the tourism industry the shudders, prompting a controvers­ial deployment of protective nets.

Australia ranked behind only the US in the number of unprovoked shark encounters with humans last year, the Internatio­nal Shark Attack File of the University of Florida shows.

“When I surf, I always think about sharks,” French tourist Alexandre Monteiro, 22, said. “Mostly when it’s cloudy, or when the water is not clear.”

The tourism industry, which supports one in three jobs and brings about A$3.7 billion (R37.6bn) into the regional economy, hailed the federal government’s use of a national interest exemption to permit shark nets on five beaches over the busy summer holidays.

Current environmen­tal laws ban such nets, but a decades-long netting programme in heavily populated areas such as Sydney and northern Queensland dates from before the laws were adopted.

The new shark nets have sparked heated debate over their usefulness and the harm they cause to marine life.

“We will see humpback whales, mothers and calves, getting entangled in the nets,” said Jeff Hansen, managing director of conservati­on group Sea Shepherd Australia. “We’re going to see an increase in turtles, rays and seals trapped and killed in these nets.”

The nets, about 150 metres long and six metres deep, stretch along roughly 200km of coast between the cities of Newcastle and Wollongong. Only KwaZulu-Natal has a netting programme on a similar scale.

The shark attacks have hit the holiday towns of Lennox Head and Ballina the hardest. Visitors further north, in the tourism area of Byron Bay, have been left on edge by four shark attacks since 2015.

The attacks had deterred visitors, hurting business, said David Loosemore, who owns Ballina hotel Dunes on Shelly Beach.

Environmen­talists say the nets that authoritie­s are relying on to discourage attacks can also harm a number of threatened and migratory species, including white sharks, and are outlawed by some federal and state protection­s.

Tracking changes in the numbers of attacks is difficult, since they are rare and irregular, and little is known about why spikes occur.

The state’s nets trapped 133 sharks and 615 other animals, during the period they were in use in 2015 and 2016, data showed this month.

Just more than half of these animals were freed alive.

That compares with 44 sharks and 145 other marine animals caught and killed in the nets in the correspond­ing 2014/15 period.

The nets are used only between the months of September and April, and removed between May and August, the season of the annual whale migration.

If the nets don’t work, tougher measures could be needed, say water sport enthusiast­s.

“If things don’t change, we have to think about managing and removal of sharks,” said Don Munro, president of a group of boardrider­s.

“Otherwise we’re just going to see more and more attacks.” – Reuters

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