Jimmy Hall’s controversial shark tour company,
Hawai’i Shark Encounters, charges $100 per person,
and takes passengers of any age and dive experience.
Boats leave Oahu’s North Shore daily and cruise three
miles out of state water boundaries. The crew loads
“victims,” as they’re jokingly called, into cages with
Plexiglas windows and as many as 30 sharks come to
swim around them. Hall’s website says sharks are drawn
to the surface by the sound of the boat engine—but
he doesn’t mention that the main attraction is the fish
scraps regularly used as chum.
Critics say chumming attracts the predators close to
shore, scaring beachgoers and changing sharks’ innate
behavior. An advisory panel that oversees fishing in
federal waters around Hawai’i approved a proposal last
October that would ban shark feeding by commercial
tour operators.
Operators like Hall moved three miles out into federal
waters when Hawai’i had passed similar measures
for state waters after people complained about seeing
sharks on the North Shore. But residents got more up
in arms when they heard that Hall planned to expand
his fleet from four to six boats. Now the fishing advisory
panel is considering banning shark feeding in all
federal waters from three to 200 miles off Hawai’i, but
there is the question whether it has jurisdiction over
shark-viewing tourists. One of its senior scientists said it may take “several years” before the council can come
up with a recommendation because of the cost and
amount of research involved.
Shark expert John Naughton, a marine biologist
with National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, doubts sharks follow boats back to
shore since they can’t keep up for long at speeds of
20 miles an hour. “They may follow the boats for a
while but then they’ll just drift off and go back to their
normal haunts,” he told a Hawaii TV news station last
summer. Naughton studied Hall’s shark operation and
believes it uses no more chum than the average fisherman.
He also said sharks are not being conditioned
to swim towards land, only to Hall’s boat, and that the
increased shark sightings is because there are more
sharks and more people in the water to see them.
However, other scientists and fishing industry members
warn of tours’ impact on sharks and their habitat.
“The animals are going to be affected in the sense that
their behavior is going to be changed,” said Robert
Hueter, director of Mote Marine Laboratory’s Center
for Shark Research in Sarasota, Florida. He thinks tours
can also cause health hazards because bringing sharks
together in abnormal densities could spread pathogens
and infections. But he is not opposed to shark diving per
se. “As long as tours are well controlled and show concern
for the animals, it should help fuel shark conservation.”