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Old Yesterday, 07:52 PM #1
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Default Sharks from species once thought harmless kill and eat snorkeler in feeding frenzy

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A 40-year-old male tourist was swimming and filming about 100m from shore in Hadera off the coast of Israel in April when he was suddenly surrounded by a shiver of dusky sharks, a species generally considered to be harmless to humans.

Witness testimonies suggest a shark reportedly lunged at his GoPro camera. Witnesses then heard him shouting: “Help… they’re biting me,” before he disappeared from sight as the water turned red and some shark fins could be seen on the surface. By the time rescue boats could arrive, the water was bloodied and the man was gone, local reports say.

“The day after, searches at sea recovered human remains (in very small quantities) that allowed the forensic confirmation of the victim’s identity, but also led to the conclusion that he had been devoured by ‘several’ sharks during this incident,” researchers wrote.

The report, published in the journal Ethology, documents the first known instance of a dusky shark – a species with no known record of killing humans – fatally attacking a diver during a feeding frenzy.

Researchers have pinned the extremely rare attack to a combination of factors, including human error, ecological distortion, and animal instinct amid a feeding frenzy.

While dusky sharks are large and seem like imposing predators, growing to about 3m (10ft) in length, they’re typically shy and wary of people.

The sea off Israel’s Hadera has attracted these sharks in droves due to the warm water coming out of the coast’s desalination plants.

In addition, human feeding of these sharks, as well as abundant food waste dumped into the region, has served to attract dusky sharks further, with dozens of them lingering around every winter.

Local boat operators catering to tourists have also thrown fish scraps in these waters to keep the sharks within their vicinity for customers.

These factors together have led the sharks to associate humans with food, and a new behavioural pattern in them called “begging”, scientists explain.

A number of sharks have been documented swimming straight toward divers, sometimes even brushing against them, looking for quick meal handouts.

A careful examination of images taken of the scene revealed that the sharks are likely dusky sharks based on the size and shape of their dorsal fin.


Dusky sharks are attracted to the warm water off the coast of Hadera

Scientists theorise that the competitive food environment created in these waters has led to the dusky sharks exhibiting a frenzy behaviour at the time of feeding.

“The competition for access to the food resource overrides the species’ usual behaviour, including the intrinsic non-instinctive nature of the (human) prey,” they wrote.

“The situation likely occurred via a process of juxtaposition bites, with two distinct motivations: the first, a (probably single) reflex/clumsiness bite driven by food begging, and the second, several predatory bites triggered by a feeding frenzy,” researchers explain.

Solutions that could be taken to prevent such incidents in the future are simpler and more effective than in the case of a classic fatal shark bite from known deadly species like tiger sharks, they say.

“The central objective is to eliminate the begging behaviour in sharks, and this can only be achieved by establishing and enforcing a complete and total ban on all artificial feeding of sharks by the public,” scientists write.

“Any other measure could be complementary, but undeniably less relevant than this approach,” they conclude.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/s...-b2849811.html
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Old Today, 05:49 AM #2
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…how weird and tragic …and pretty gruesome…how incredible though/in terms of advancement, that he could be identified by what must have been very little more than clothing that would have been torn to shreds…?….’triggers’ are often mentioned, aren’t they…in terms of human behaviour and often especially in terms of violence in human behaviour and something that could trigger very much what we thought would be out of character …so that can obviously apply in the animal/sea world as well…if this is a first from this shark type then surely there must have been a trigger …maybe a piece of equipment or something that the man had/was using that sent out some signals to the sharks to draw them to him…?…and then once surrounding him, some chance chain of very unfortunate bumps and bruises and skin openings or whatever…and they all went into a frenzy…?…gosh, I mean…that’s a tragic and gruesome story that just couldn’t be written, isn’t it…and yet it’s happened…poor guy/very sad…
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Old Today, 06:56 AM #3
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I heard in a podcast about the film Jaws that one of the reasons that sharks sometimes attack humans is when the visibility is poor - sharks won't distinguish between humans (that they don't normally attack) and other types of prey.

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Old Today, 07:04 AM #4
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…some interesting shark facts…(…although there are no rules to facts that can’t be broken…)…

Sharks don’t eat humans. Sharks are intelligent and curious creatures and most sharks bite humans out of curiosity and then swim away disinterested.

Sharks can use the heartbeat of their prey to track them.

Bull sharks bite with the greatest force among sharks, pound-for-pound, greater even than great whites or hammerheads.

Sharks have survived five massive planet extinction events. These extinction events killed most life on earth and the last one around 65 million yeas ago killed the dinosaurs.

Only 3 sharks have an international ban in fishing. They are the Whale Shark, Basking Shark and Great White Shark. A number of other sharks have restrictions on international trade market but clearly more is needed to protect sharks globally.
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Old Today, 07:48 AM #5
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sharks are harmless



the blame is with that snorkeler, honestly, and local authorities whom clearly gave that person misinformation, something like about there being no sharks in that area



and i doubt the shark was aware at first it being a human, but more thinking it was a turtle or something, due to specific movements made
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Old Today, 10:29 AM #6
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[Thought harmless kill and eat snorkeler in feeding frenzy]

Never swim in a Shark area
That's invading their space

Respect their zones
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