China Daily

Sharks reel in fans in Mediterran­ean waters

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HADERA, Israel — The wind was blowing, clouds blocked the sun and the sea was choppy and cold, but Hagai Mayer and his two friends didn’t care. They wanted to see the sharks.

Every winter, as sea temperatur­es drop, sharks seeking warmer waters head to a northern Israeli shore, drawing enthusiast­s who take the plunge in hopes of catching a glimpse of the enigmatic predators.

Dozens of sandbar and dusky sharks, which can reach up to three meters in length, converge by the bubbly stream of seawater used to cool the turbines of a power station near Hadera and then discharged back into the Mediterran­ean.

The site has become a magnet not only for sharks but also for researcher­s and people like Mayer, a resident of the nearby kibbutz Nahsholim, who on a cold February morning was preparing to go snorkeling.

“We’re here to visit the sharks, we’ve been doing so for the past few years, whenever we have an opportunit­y,” he said.

Seeing the large animals underwater in a natural habitat is “an adrenaline rush you can’t even describe”, he said. “To me, encounters with wild animals in nature is the highest level of excitement, certainly with impressive animals like these.”

Scientists are not entirely sure what draws the sharks to the small area below the four looming chimneys of the Hadera power plant, but it’s clear to them that “it has something to do with the sea temperatur­e”, said Adi Barash.

Barash, a PhD student researchin­g sharks at Haifa University’s Leon Recanati Institute for Maritime Studies, said the Hadera phenomenon, which exists to a lesser extent off smaller power plants in southern Israel, is not known to occur elsewhere in the world.

Sharks, according to Barash, have an unjustifia­bly bad reputation that is costing them their lives.

“The movie Jaws created a very significan­t change in people’s perception”, promoting a “primordial fear that encourages mass killings of sharks, totally disproport­ionate to the danger they pose”, she said.

“A shark is not dangerous, there’s no reason to fear it,” Barash went on, noting that more people die by slipping in the shower than from sharks.

No recorded incidents

There have not been any recorded incidents of sharks attacking people off Israel’s Mediterran­ean coast for decades.

While sharks have been visiting Hadera for at least 20 years, their number has been on the rise due to the increase in the size of the power plant and enforcemen­t of legislatio­n protecting them.

Ran Golan, whose diving club “Out of the Blu” specialize­s in guiding people at the Hadera site, said that sunny winter weekends draw hundreds of people diving, swimming, snorkeling, boating or just observing the sharks from the nearby shore.

The stream from the Hadera plant creates turbulence that makes scuba diving in the relatively shallow waters challengin­g, and Golan briefs a pair of divers before leading them into the water that same chilly morning.

Exiting the water nearly an hour later, first-time shark diver Eyav Zuckerman was grinning broadly.

For most of the dive he didn’t see much more than a tail, said Zuckerman, from Yokneam in northern Israel. But as their time underwater was about to end, the group of four encountere­d two sharks, one of them crossing right in front of Zuckerman’s face.

The limited visibility made the shark’s unexpected appearance seem “like something out of a horror film”, he said. “But when you get that beautiful creature up near your face, the feeling is totally different.”

His experience seemed to have changed his perception of the marine predators.

“They must be more sensitive and shy than people say,” he said.

 ?? RAN GOLAN VIA AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? A diver takes a photograph of a shark in the Mediterran­ean sea off Israel on Dec 19.
RAN GOLAN VIA AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE A diver takes a photograph of a shark in the Mediterran­ean sea off Israel on Dec 19.

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