The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Sharks are far less dangerous than flu
You might want a bigger boat, but you probably don’t need better odds.
The confirmed return of great white sharks to Cape Cod has rattled some boaters and beachgoers. Yet the chances of an encounter involving a human are infinitesimally small, and the likelihood of an attack resulting in serious injury or death is smaller still.
How small? With apologies to “The Hunger Games,” may the odds be ever in your favor — because they are.
In 2016, there were 53 unprovoked shark attacks in the U.S., none fatal, accord- ing to the Florida Museum of Natural History’s International Shark Attack File. Thirty-two were in Florida; 10 in Hawaii; four in Califor
nia; three in North Carolina; two in South Carolina; and one each in Texas and Oregon. Worldwide, there were 81 confirmed attacks last year, including four deaths.
Statistically, you’re more likely to be killed by an aster- oid than by a shark.
Q: Exactly what odds are we talking about here?
A: They vary, depending on where you are and what you’re doing in the water. But the National Aquarium in Baltimore says the odds of being killed by a shark are one in 3.7 million.
You’re much more in dan- ger of succumbing to the flu (a one-in-63 chance); a car accident (one in 90); a fall (one in 218); a lightning strike (one in 960,000); or even an asteroid (one in 1.6 million). University of Flor- ida shark experts say you’re 290 times more likely to die in a boating accident than to suffer a fatal shark attack, and 132 times more likely to drown at the beach.
Q: Are there things we do in the water that increase the risk?
A: Surfers tend to suffer the most attacks. Last year, nearly six in 10 U.S. attacks involved someone engaging in a board sport. Experts say that’s probably because surf-
ers spend a lot of time in the “surf zone” where waves are breaking — an area sharks also tend to frequent. They urge bathers and others to avoid places where seals, a favorite prey for great white sharks, congregate.
Swimmers and waders accounted for one in three attacks. Snorkelers and people using flotation gear figured into a combined 8.6 per- cent of all U.S. attacks. Mas
sachusetts’ last attack was in 2012, when a white shark
bit a bodysurfing man on his legs. Even so, perspective is everything: A 2015 Stanford University study concluded that scuba divers are nearly 7,000 times more likely to be hospitalized for decom- pression sickness than for shark bites.
Q: Where are these great whites, and how many are there?
A: Biologists tracking them in Massachusetts say they’ve identified 279 sharks over the past three years, most along Cape Cod’s outer Atlantic-facing coastline. Increasingly, though, they’ve been straying into Cape Cod Bay. More are expected in July, August and September — the peak months on the Cape.
There are also great white sharks feeding off Long Island, New York, and the New Jersey shore.
Q: If the odds are so minuscule, why are we so scared of sharks? Is it some kind of primal fear?
A: Gregory Skomal, a shark expert with Massachusetts’ Division of Marine Fisheries, thinks so. Humans, he notes, have evolved an acutely tuned sense of survival that alerts us to threats.
Despite the fact that any interaction between a per- son and a shark is highly improbable, particularly a deadly one, “there’s a deep- seated fear in all humans of being bitten by some animal, either on land or in the sea,” Skomal says. “And the ocean looks dark and deep and foreign to us. It embel- lishes that fear.”