Grand Cayman dive tour operators plan to make no
changes in their daily trips to Stingray City, despite the
fatal attack on Steve Irwin. Mark Button, an operator
for Moby Dick Tours, told CNN, “I think the phenomenon
is totally different to what you encounter in the
wild.” For more than 20 years Button’s been taking
tourists to the location where up to 50 stingrays await
handouts of squid from divers and snorkelers. “The fish
have been hand-fed for more than two decades,” he
said. “Therefore, they’re in a different state of affairs
when it comes to dealing with humans.” Button does
warn tourists not to make sudden movements, and to
keep their hands away from the stingrays’ tails, where
the serrated barb is housed.
None of the company’s tour participants — some
600 per day — has ever suffered “any serious injuries,”
he said. “They have the odd sting now and again.”
But, there are injuries. Last year an 11-year-old boy
was bitten by an eel at Sting Ray City. During a six-hour
surgical procedure on Grand Cayman, doctors used
a vein from his leg to help restore blood flow to his
hand, then the boy was air evacuated (the flight cost
was $21,000) home to Wisconsin for further surgery.
Cayman underwater photographer Cathy Church
told Undercurrent, “What happened to Steve Irwin and
what goes on at Stingray City have virtually nothing
in common. Steve unfortunately scared and perhaps
cornered a very large, wild stingray … that had never
related to humans before.” Church, who leads Stingray
City tours herself, adds that the unique site “is occupied
by smaller, more docile rays that have been interacting
with humans all of their lives… These rays come of
their own free will … and travel benignly from person
to person looking for food… To evoke a defensive
reaction, a person would have to cause actual bodily
harm to the ray by punching it very hard, grabbing
it viciously, stabbing it with a knife or trying to hold
it down. I have pushed and shoved these rays a lot
while feeding them and defending myself from their
insistence on eating all of the food at one time. We lift
them for the tourists, we hold food under their mouths
to make them follow us, and they just go along with it
all because at the end of the day they are contented
and full.”
Perhaps. But, what wild land animals get such treatment?
Why is it acceptable to abuse and treat fish like
toys? What is the philosophical and moral justification?
Is it enough to say that it’s ok to wear a ray like a
hat because it goes along with it? Does anyone debate
questions such as these in the presumably civilized
Caymans?
Thankfully, new draft regulations may impose a ban
on lifting stingrays from the water. Gina Ebanks-Petrie,
Director of the Department of Environment, told the
Caymanian Compass that the proposed regulations are
aimed at protecting rays, not tourists. Stingrays would
be designated as a protected species, and feeding them
would be limited. Fishing or removing any marine life
from the area, wearing footwear close to rays and the
reef and anchoring boats over the sandbar and shallow
coral areas would be prohibited. Also, a new stingray
feeding site will be allowed on smaller and deeper sand
bars southeast of the current site, if no new sites are
established anywhere else in the Caymans.