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NICK WHITNEY AND GREG SKOMAL: Facts, but no easy answers, around shark bites in New England

July 31, 2020 — A terrible tragedy took place in the waters off Maine this past Monday when a woman was fatally injured by a bite from a white shark. As shark scientists, we follow these incidents closely and try to learn whatever we can, but we fully realize that data and analyses are of little comfort to all those affected.

We also know that part of our job as scientists is to communicate the facts to the public as clearly as possible: This was the first-ever shark-related fatality in Maine’s history. There were only two fatalities from sharks in the world in 2019. Globally, shark bites on humans were lower than average in 2018 and 2019, and this trend appears to be continuing in 2020, according to the International Shark Attack File at the Florida Museum of Natural History. Given the number of people who enter the water every year, shark bites are rare (64 bites worldwide in 2019), and the vast majority of people who are bitten survive.

Those are the numbers, but other facts around shark attacks are much more difficult to assess: Why did this specific incident happen? What brought the shark so close to shore? What attracted it to the pair of swimmers? Why did it bite? The reality is that such incidents are so rare that the single biggest factor is probably chance.

Read the full story at The Boston Globe

North Carolina’s sharks are attacking fish and leaving them half eaten

April 4, 2017 — The recent spate of shark attacks off the coast of the Carolinas isn’t just hurting the plans of beach enthusiasts as North Carolina fishermen in the Outer Banks have started to be affected as well.

The apparent increase of sharks in the area is hitting fisherman where it hurts most – their wallets.

Sharks in the area have been feasting on the local fish population and leaving a trail of half-eaten carcasses behind in their wake.

These partially-devoured fish have been a problem for weeks for off-shore fishermen, according to NewsChannel 3.

Fisherman Glen Hopkins said: “It’s really heart wrenching when you catch a $1,000 fish, and you can’t get it to the boat.  It’s nothing but a chunk of mangled up meat. Some sets we don’t get a fish back. We might catch 25 or 30 heads. Pieces where everything is gone. It’s literally costing thousands and thousands out of my pocket.”

Another fisherman, Britton Shackelford, said the predators ‘are just following the boat’ and he sometimes sees thousands of sharks when he is out on the water.

He added: ‘At least two-thirds of your catch is going to be eaten before it ever gets to the boat.’

Read the full story at the Daily Mail

Flounders’ Eyes Face Skyward. How Do They See the Ocean Floor?

August 15, 2016 — For flatfishes, you’d think things would always be looking up.

These quick-change artists have eyes on top of their heads, yet marvelously mimic the surfaces they sit on. This prompted Clayton Louis Ferrara to ask Weird Animal Question of the Week: “If flatfish have eyes on the top of their heads, how do they see what’s going on on the ocean floor?”

Flatfish, found all over the world, range from the angelfin whiff, which is about three inches (eight centimeters) to the Pacific halibut, which can get up to around nine feet (three meters) long. This fish group includes species familiar to seafood lovers—not only halibut, but flounder, sole, and turbot.

All flatfish have eyes on the end of stalks, so they pop out of the head “kind of like the eyes we saw in cartoons—ba-boing!” says George Burgess of the Florida Museum of Natural History.

Read the full story at National Geographic

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