On the first of May, an Aussie
scallop diver encountered a great
white shark, which the Aussies call
a “white pointer.” After being
down for five minutes, Paul
Buckland surfaced and yelled
wildly to his mate that a shark was
in the water. Deckhand Shannon
Jenzen tried to pull Buckland
aboard, but the shark attacked,
pulling him from Jenzen’s grasp
and dragging him under. Jenzen
jumped to the boat’s controls and
rammed the shark, eventually
forcing the shark to let go, but it
was too late. By the time Jenzen
hauled Buckland from the water,
the shark had bitten off his leg
and part of his torso. Buckland
died in Jenzen’s arms.
The culprit in this attack in
southern Australia was nearly
twenty feet long. It had been
taunting boats in the area for several
weeks. One fisherman said he
had warned Buckland about the
shark only a few days earlier, but
Buckland had assured him that
he was using a SharkPOD, an
electronic device used to ward off
sharks. The device Buckland
used had been developed by the
Natal Sharks Board in South
Africa, which is no longer operating.
The SharkPOD:
Did It Fail?
This same technology is back
on the market, having been
introduced on March 27 with
great hoopla. The technology
was purchased by SeaChange
Technology, an Australian company
that spent two years and a
few million to miniaturize it. In a
press release received by
Undercurrent, the company says
“Shields are designed for use by
divers, surfers, swimmers, and
snorkelers,” and soon to come will
be “a unit to be incorporated in life
jackets, a boating version to provide
a shark exclusion zone at the rear of
boats and yachts, and a larger commercial
version for beach protection.
Their press release said
“SeaChange Shark Shields work by
surrounding the user with an electrical
field that has an impact on the
shark’s central nervous system
through sensitive receptors near the
shark’s snout. The initial mild discomfort
increases if the shark
approaches the field until it causes
muscle spasms and becomes intolerable.
The shark then veers away and
leaves the immediate area. Under
normal conditions the closest a shark
is likely to approach a user is twelve
to fifteen feet for the dive unit and
six to nine feet for the general purpose
model.”
According to SeaChange Technology, “Extensive testing in
the most shark-infested waters of
the world, including Neptune
Island in South Australia and the
world’s shark capital near Cape
Town, South Africa, has shown
the units to be highly effective in
deterring sharks, including white
pointers. . . . It is significant that
the world’s largest recreational
dive training and accreditation
agency, PADI, believes that the
SeaChange Shark Shields have
the potential to increase significantly
the popularity of diving.”
A free diver cruising at thirty-five feet off
Deerfield Beach, FL, had a three-foot
nurse shark clamp onto his left arm.
“I had to grab him and make my
way up top to get more air. ” |
The unit for divers has a main
housing that can be worn on the
thigh, in the BC pocket, or
attached to the BC. An antenna
electrode is worn on the ankle,
with the antenna resting on the
fin. Its battery life is more than
four hours. Company spokesman
Chris Rann told Undercurrent
that the product will arrive on the
American market this summer
and should retail for about $400
(go to www.seachangetechnology.com.au for more details).
For the moment, I suspect, the
investors are a little shaky,
although the company offers a
good defense for its product,
even in light of the death. In
interviews with ABC radio in
Adelaide, Rann said, “It can be
said categorically that there has
never previously been an attack
involving a wearer and we are
talking about thousands of people
using the technology in many
parts of the world over seven years
and a comprehensive scientific
test program several years before
that.”
He said that some commercial
divers leave the devices turned off
while diving. “They try and cons
e rve battery power and when
they sight a shark they switch the
repellent on. I’m told this practice
is relatively common.” He
also said that Buckland was
attacked while halfway out of the
water. If not submerged, the
device will not work.
Local police sergeant Bob
McDonald said police divers
always wear shark repellents when
they are in water where there
might be sharks, but they are still
aware of the risks. “We look at it a
bit like car air bags 95 to 98 percent
of the time they will save
lives and prevent serious injuries,
but every now and again they
don’t. There’s always going to be
the odd shark that’s intent on
doing what it’s going to do and
nothing is going to stop it.”
Aussies love their beaches, so
to keep themselves safe they systematically
net and kill sharks. In
the past forty years, Queensland’s
official shark netting program has
killed more than 38,000 sharks
(not to mention those killed in
other territories) and no swimmer
has been attacked. Each year
the nets catch fewer and fewer,
joining shark finning and other
practices in wiping out sharks.
“Only” 800 were caught in 2000
65 percent were whaler and tiger
sharks, the species “frequently
implicated in shark attacks.”
A government committee said
“The program has reduced the
risk of attack at many beaches
where nearby communities have a
very significant reliance on
tourism,” yet at a tremendous cost
to other wildlife, as well as sharks.
In the past decade more than 800
turtles were hooked and eighty
died, including endangered loggerhead, ridley, and leatherback
turtles. Last year a rare Indo-Pacific
humpbacked dolphin and an
Irrawaddy dolphin died in the
shark nets. Since 1962, 654
dugongs have been caught in nets
(the government acknowledges
that the program has contributed
to the decline in dugongs). In the
past fifteen years, thirteen whales
have been caught. Three died last
year. This year, in the last week in
March, seven whaler and tiger
sharks were caught. Several environmental
groups have called for
removal of the nets, but the government
says no. They want the
tourists to keep coming.
Here in America
Of course, divers in American
waters are susceptible to shark
attacks as well. In mid-March, free
diver Robert Land, cruising at thirty-
five feet off Deerfield Beach, FL,
had a three-foot nurse shark clamp
onto his left arm. “I had to grab
him and make my way up top to
get more air,” he told the South
Florida Sun-Sentinel. He had spent
five minutes struggling in the
water, fighting with the shark while
t rying to breathe, when nearby
boaters noticed his distress and
came to help. The persistent shark
refused to release its grip, so the
boaters slit its belly to no avail.
“It was trying to rip my arm.
Scary,” Land said. With the shark
still dangling from Land’s arm, the
boaters raced him to the Boca
Raton Beach Club, where waiting
paramedics pried the shark’s jaws
open with wood planks and pieces
of metal. While his arm was riddled
with teeth marks, he was released
the same day from a local hospital.
Land said he learned one lesson.
“They said I should always have a buddy with me.”
Most divers consider nurse
sharks to be benign little creatures,
although there are cases of
them biting people, including
one lady who was seriously bitten
last year while snorkeling near an
area where sharks were fed.
Deerfield, of course, was one of
the first Florida communities to
ban shark feeding before it was
banned statewide.
They Bite “Experts” Too
Erich Ritter was a leader
against the Florida shark feeding
ban, saying there is no evidence to
support it. Ritter, who says he is a
professor at Hofstra University
and the University of Zurich,
where he received his doctorate
in behavioral ecology, has told
the press that he can keep sharks
away by modifying his heart rate.
He says he has never even been
nipped, attributing that largely to
his ability to understand sharks’
body language, writes Kellie
Patrick in the South Florida Sun-
Sentinel .
In early April, Ritter was in
waist-deep water with four students
at Walker’s Cay in the
Bahamas when a big lemon
shark bit off a large portion of his
left calf. He went into shock and
was flown to St. Mary ’s Medical
Center in West Palm Beach.
“That was an accident waiting
to happen,” said Samuel Gruber, a
University of Miami professor. “Erich
takes certain chances based on what
he thinks he knows about shark
behavior, but there is no evidence to
support his theories,” he said. “He’s
more like a philosopher than a scientist .”
And, to those who persist with
their romantic notions about shark
behavior, preferring to cotton to
philosophers rather than scientists,
we offer the words of Keats:
“In the dull catalogue of common
things, Philosophy will clip an angel’s
wings.”
—Ben Davison