Shark Attacks Down For Third Year
In A Row
Thursday February 12, 2004
MIAMI, Florida (Reuters) --
Shark attacks around the world declined in 2003
for a third straight year, partly because swimmers and surfers
grew more accustomed to thinking of the ocean as a wild and dangerous
place, and possibly also because of a decline in the global shark
population.
The University of Florida, which houses the International
Shark Attack File, said there were 55 unprovoked attacks worldwide,
down from 63 reported in 2002 and lower than the previous year's
68 attacks.
Four people were killed, compared to three in 2002, four in 2001
and 11 in the year 2000.
Normally, scientists do not put much stock in year-to-year fluctuations
in the number of attacks because they can be affected by such
things as the weather and oceanographic conditions that drive
bait fish closer to shore.
But the third consecutive year of decline could indicate a longer
term trend, the university said.
"I think people are beginning to get a little more intelligent
about when and where they enter the water," George Burgess,
director of the International Shark Attack File, said in a statement.
"There seems to be more of an understanding that when we
enter the sea, it's a wilderness experience and we're intruders
in that environment."
Burgess added that a fall in the global shark population because
of overfishing could have played a role, as might have the downturn
in the U.S. economy, which made cash-strapped holidaymakers give
up their annual pilgrimage to the beach.
As in most recent years, the bulk of last year's attacks -- 41
-- were in U.S. waters. One of the most prominent victims was
13-year-old surfing champion Bethany Hamilton, who lost an arm
to a Great White off Kauai's North Shore in Hawaii.
There were six attacks in Australia, two each in Brazil and South
Africa, and one each in Fiji, India, Madagascar and Venezuela.
The U.S. state of Florida remained the world's shark attack capital.