Scuba Diving

SCUBA DIVING NEWS   ::   SCUBALINX   ::   SCUBA FORUM   ::   SCUBA POLL   ::   CYBER DIVER

Scuba Diving NewsScuba Diving CDNNScuba NewsDive Travel NewsScuba Diving Safety NewsEco NewsScuba Industry NewsScience

Dive News :: CDNNScuba Diving NewslettersCDNN Act NowCDNN PhotoCDNN InterviewCDNN Special ReportCDNN EditorialsCDNN ArticlesDestinationsDiver Alert

SCUBA DIVING PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: SAFETY

Thrilled to death: Shark feeding in the Bahamas

Powered by CDNN - CYBER DIVER News Network
by BRIAN SKOLOFF

WEST PALM BEACH, Florida (29 Feb 2008) — Ask any shark diver why they do it and the answer is quick and simple – the thrill.

From Cape Town to California, Florida and the Bahamas, adventurous divers can slip into the ocean with an experienced guide to observe some of the world's fiercest predators.

But some say the search for a thrill has gone too far: baiting the water with bloody fish parts and getting face-to-face to the most aggressive species without cages or protective gear. An Austrian tourist on this kind of dive was fatally bitten by a shark this week.

Bans on feeding sharks in Florida and federal waters have pushed some shark diving companies to the Bahamas, about 50 miles off the coast, where 49-year-old Austrian lawyer Markus Groh's tour took him Sunday. He was bitten on the leg and died a day later.

Critics liken the practice to feeding bears or any other wild predator, and say the more contact sharks have with people, the more likely they are to attack.

But others say such attacks are rare and that the dives, popular among international tourists as well as adventurous Americans, actually help educate people about sharks and conservation.

Groh's death was the first reported fatality from a shark attack during feeding, said George Burgess, director of the International Shark Attack File.

Burgess fiercely opposes feeding wild sharks under any circumstances, claiming it turns them into "trained circus animals."

"Ecotourism for animals is a great concept, but it is most successful in situations where people watch their natural behaviors from afar and not intrude," Burgess said.

Fears about diver safety and altering shark behavior led Florida to ban feeding sharks in 2001. It's also banned in Hawaii and in federal waters, which generally begin just beyond a state's three-mile territory and extend about 200 miles out.

Many operators in the Caribbean take divers to reefs in shallow water where less aggressive sharks feed, such as black tips. Some also use cages or metal suits to protect divers.

The problem, Burgess said, is that some tour operators take risks to lure clients by offering a chance to get closer to the bigger, more unpredictable sharks such as bulls, lemons and tigers – species responsible for most attacks worldwide.

Groh's tour with Scuba Adventures of Riviera Beach, Fla., was just such a trip with no cages, chum in the water, and diving in the deep, open ocean.

The dive company has been criticized by the Bahamas Diving Association, which sent a letter last year urging it to stop conducting "open-water, non-cage shark diving experiences with known species of potentially dangerous sharks."

"It reached the point where it wasn't a matter of if but when an incident was going to occur," said Neal Watson, the association president.

Scuba Adventures' operators have declined comment about the attack or their business.

 

Jim Abernethy
Happier times for notorious shark feeder Jim Abernethy who attempted to evade Florida's ban on shark feeding. Abernethy is now under criminal investigation after one of his customers died during a shark feeding dive in the Bahamas.

Keith Rogers, owner of Dive Abaco in the Bahamas, has been leading shark diving expeditions for more than a decade.

While his clients are not caged and don't wear protective gear, he operates tours only in about 50 feet of water along the reefs where bigger, more aggressive sharks are rare.

Rogers cited benefits, including that his clients leave "no longer considering sharks as predators of man."

"And it's definitely exciting," he said. "When the divers come up, they're thrilled to death."

CDNN RELATED NEWS

  • CDNN SPECIAL REPORT - Shark Feeding
  • FLORIDA - Jim Abernethy under criminal investigation for shark feeding death
  • BAHAMAS - Shark kills tourist during Jim Abernethy's 'interactive' shark feeding dive
  • FLORIDA - Fatal shark attack vindicates Florida's decision to ban shark feeding
  • BAHAMAS - Shark kills tourist during Jim Abernethy's 'interactive' shark feeding dive
  • KEY LARGO - Shark 1, shark molesting scuba idiot 0
  • FLORIDA - Utah tourist dies scuba diving with Jim Abernethy Scuba Adventures
  • GRAND BAHAMA - Shark attack victim sues Our Lucaya resort for $25m
  • WALKER'S CAY - Shark feeder Eric Ritter attacked at shark feeding site
  • SCUBA FORUM

  • DISCUSS THIS TOPIC - Dive in and have your say at Scuba Forum
  • KNOW BEFORE YOU GO

  • SCUBALINX :: Dive Florida
  • CYBER DIVER TRAVEL GUIDE :: Florida
  • CDNN DESTINATIONS :: Florida
  • KNOW BEFORE YOU GO

  • SCUBALINX :: Dive Bahamas
  • CYBER DIVER TRAVEL GUIDE :: Bahamas
  • CDNN DESTINATIONS :: Bahamas
  •  

    SHARK BAITING: Hype vs Reality

  • Myth: Shark feeders and shark baiters aim to conserve sharks.
  • Truth: Dive industry-endorsed shark feeders and shark baiters aim to profit from so-called "interactive" shark feeding tours that harm marine wildlife and compromise public safety.

  • Myth: Shark feeding is a non-issue because shark finning is worse.
  • Truth: Just because there are people doing worse things to sharks does not make shark feeding trivial, or a non-issue.

  • Myth: Baiting sharks or feeding sharks does not modify shark behavior.
  • Truth: Manipulating sharks with bait to approach dive boats and "perform" for a dozen or more thrill-seeking scuba diving tourists, or "model" for underwater photographers, severely damages their natural defense mechanisms and significantly increases the probability they will be killed by shark fishers.

  • Myth: Feeding or baiting sharks is the solution to finning sharks.
  • Truth: There is no evidence that the billion plus consumers who eat sharks are motivated by hatred, fear and revenge, nor that rebranding sharks as "circus" or "rodeo" performers will make them less appetizing.  Since the dive industry endorsed "interactive" shark diving, the number of sharks killed every year has tripled to satisfy the increasing Chinese demand for shark fin soup.

  • Myth: People get their information about sharks from Hollywood horror movies.
  • Truth: Most people do not get their information about sharks from crude, dated Hollywood horror movies (JAWS) nor underwater image touts masquerading as conservationists.  While it is natural to fear apex predators such as bears, lions, tigers and sharks, it is not natural to wish them to be wiped off the face of the planet.  People understand that most big animal species are threatened by human activities and should be protected.

  • Myth: Pretending that sharks do not eat humans will help protect them.
  • Truth: Whale sharks are renowned as the gentle giants of the shark world.  They do not eat humans, yet they are among the most endangered of all shark species. While not the perferred main course of apex predators, the notion that humans are somehow exempt from the menu is almost as absurd as the notion that encouraging people to bait, feed, poke, prod and ride sharks will stop one billion plus people from eating them.

     

       ADVANCED SEARCH

    site map         ::         notice         ::         privacy         ::         about us         ::         faq         ::         my news         ::         advertise         ::         contact

    © 1995 - 2008  CDNN GLOBAL NEWS NETWORK