Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Shark attacks drop during coronaviru­s pandemic

- Jim Waymer

MELBOURNE, Fla. – The coronaviru­s pandemic had one pearly white lining this year: fewer shark attacks.

With fewer people in the water to bite, shark attacks have dropped worldwide, likely because of all the closed beaches and widespread quarantine­s, experts at the University of Florida’s Internatio­nal Shark Attack File suspect.

From Jan. 1 to June 18, there were only 18 unprovoked shark bites confirmed worldwide, down from 24 over the same time period in 2019 and 28 in 2018. Seven of this year’s bites were in the United States, two in Florida waters. Three unprovoked attacks resulted in deaths – two in Australia and one in California, up from last year’s total of two deaths. Two bites happened in Hawaii, with single bites also in California, Delaware and North Carolina.

“The fact that we’re in the teens at this time of year, with only two bites in Florida, is a sign that something else is at play,” Tyler Bowling, manager of the ISAF, said in a release.

Said Bowling, “COVID-19 is the obvious answer, though there could be other factors.”

Florida had tallied eight bites by midJune in 2019 and seven in 2018. This year, experts have confirmed two minor bites in the state thus far, one each in Duval and Brevard counties.

On April 7, Stacy Orosz was bitten on her foot and ankle by a shark while she and her husband paddled out past the break and were sitting on their surfboards about 10 a.m. off of Cocoa Beach. Orosz estimated the bite came from a 6foot bull shark.

The ISAF experts already had been documentin­g an unusual decrease in shark bites in recent years. Last year’s 64 unprovoked attacks worldwide were a 22% drop from the most recent fiveyear average of 82 incidents annually. But this year’s numbers so far are an even more significant dip in the downward trend, Bowling said.

Comparing the past 20 years, this year ties 2005 for the lowest number of shark bites recorded from January through May, with 15 unprovoked attacks, compared with an average of about 25.

Bowling and Gavin Naylor, director of the Florida Museum of Natural History’s shark research program, investigat­e all human-shark interactio­ns. They focus on bites initiated by a shark in its natural habitat with no human provocatio­n.

“The East Coast has been pretty quiet, and that’s where we pick up blacktips and the occasional bull shark,” Bowling said.

A few additional shark incidents remain under investigat­ion, he added, and bites can change classification as more informatio­n becomes available.

Many Florida beaches, parks and boat ramps closed during parts of March, April and May, with restrictio­ns remaining in effect in some counties on activities such as sunbathing, beachacces­s parking and number of visitors.

While shark attacks are down, swimmers and surfers should not lower their guard, Bowling warned. Bite numbers tend to surge in July, the height of vacation season, he said, and September is the month that marks the beginning of the annual blacktip shark migration from the Carolinas to South Florida.

According to the Internatio­nal Shark Attack File, an average of 59,664 people die from the flu each year in the United States, which is a 1 in 63 chance of death during one’s lifetime. By comparison, there is a 1 in 3.7 million chance of dying from a shark attack during one’s lifetime.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Bull sharks are blamed for many human-shark interactio­ns.
GETTY IMAGES Bull sharks are blamed for many human-shark interactio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States