It all started many years ago with shark feeding at Stella Maris in
the Bahamas. They wanted to stimulate
some sharks into a feeding frenzy for the purpose of wildlife filming,
and the German-run dive center there
stumbled on what was to become a regular and spectacular diving
experience. It became a way of getting
close-up to these predators that was hitherto thought to be impossible.
Other dive centers in the Bahamas soon caught on, and before long,
such shark dives were springing up
all over the tropical world. Ben Rose at UNEXSO used a chain-mail suit
and found that, so protected, he
could actually pet the sharks. Herwarth Voigtmann in the Maldives first
went that bit further by feeding
them with the bait held in his mouth. His daughter was even
photographed doing it in the nude! (An
accident later resulted in shark feeding being banned in that country.)
Inevitably, people seek to be more adventurous as they get more
confident. Today, we are regularly
regaled with YouTube footage of snorkelers riding tiger sharks, pretty
young women wearing little or nothing
at all while breath-hold diving with sharks, and shark-feeders
performing a variety of stunts for the benefit
of the ubiquitous underwater cameras.
Jeremy Stafford-Deitsch, photographer and author of a best-selling
shark diving book during the ’80s but
now retired from diving, is scathing of such recent developments. “An
often ugly stage of shark diving is
upon us. The advances in underwater photographic equipment mean that
getting fantastic photographs in reasonable conditions is almost
guaranteed. While there are plenty of responsible dive operators
offering
superb shark dives to genuinely interested divers, a considerable
number of attention-seeking types have
emerged who, seeking to use sharks to make themselves famous, indulge
in ever more vulgar and irresponsible
stunts for the sake of the camera -- stunts that soon appear all over
the Internet, and beyond. The perpetrators
inevitably claim that their antics are for the benefit of the animals.
Elbowing each other out of the
way for the limited limelight, these divers must come up with ever more
idiotic stunts; one aging ex-model
even recently posed naked among circling sharks as her own contribution
to shark conservation.”
George Burgess, the curator of the Shark Attack File at the Florida
Museum of Natural History, has said,
“It appears that the pendulum has completely swung. A newly
restructured shark image has emerged in
the shark-feeding dive communities, and sharks have been transformed
from blood-thirsty man-eaters to
playful puppies. As is often the case, the truth lies somewhere in
between the two extremes.”
Cristina Zenato, a “shark consultant and trainer” in Freeport,
Bahamas, has carried on with the sharkpetting
tradition started by Ben Rose, and developed her shark dives into what
may only be described as a
spectacular shark ballet, handling and balancing compliant Caribbean
reef sharks on their snouts and even
kissing them. She apparently loves her sharks.
I asked Mike Neumann, owner of Fiji’s Beqa Adventure Divers, a place
that promises the most spectacular
shark dive in the world, to look at footage of Zenato at work and tell
me what he made of this new style
of interaction between people with sharks. His reply: “The romantic
might call it love, but a cynic might say
the shark is assuming a position to have ectoparasites removed, and
simply following what it takes to be
the cleaning creature when it retreats. Clearly, the sharks have been
conditioned and habituated to humans
insofar as they appear to have lost their natural fear of them. This is
a known side-effect of provisioned
shark dives in that, when they are conducted responsibly, they lead to
less defensive aggression, the flip
side being those infamous beggar sharks, hence the need for good
protocols. Those sharks may well want to
be cleaned.”
Neumann refused to be drawn into commenting on Zenato’s vertical
tonic immobility stunt. “Jim
Abernethy [of Florida-based Scuba Adventures] has equally amazing
footage of lemon sharks snuggling
up to divers at the Tiger Beach cleaning station and equally only being
rewarded with a friendly rub. Both
Jimmy and Cristina have removed vast numbers of fishing hooks from the
sharks, so the sharks may indeed
regard them as some sort of cleaner organism of consequence. It may be
something else, especially in the
case of Cristina, who induces a trance-like state by stimulating the
shark’s snout. The sharks may simply
come in for the resulting pleasurable sensation.
“Shark dives need to be regarded as wildlife encounters, and
conditioning needs to be kept to a minimum,
limited to attracting otherwise shy species. All else is simply
unwarranted and often disrespectful showmanship that benefits only the
human, with only more risks for the animal. Cristina and Jimmy get
a pass not so much for what they do but for who they are; the other
shark molesters not so much. Once
you’ve logged thousands of shark dives, devoted your life to shark
conservation, but above all, removed
hundreds of hooks, you, too, will be entitled to some rather
superfluous and clearly not reciprocated shark
love -- petting, scratching, hugging and kissing included!”
Not to be outdone by Zenato, Eli Martinez from San Juan, TX, has
been seen habitually vertically spinning
Emma, a well-known large tiger shark at Tiger Beach in the Bahamas,
with her snout on the palm of
his hand, and he does this apparently without the protection of a
chainmail suit. Where will it all stop?
Neither should we forget diving icon Valerie Taylor, the greatest
shark handler of them all. Taylor may
be Australian, but recent attempts to set up similar shark-patting
dives by fellow Australian and shark educator
Tony Isaacson on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast have met with a lot of
resistance. Local dive operator
Philip Hart says, “There seems to have been a success with ‘shark
whispering’ in some other parts of the
world, but we are a long way from conditioning our local predators to
come up for a cuddle. Encouraging
them to come in close to our major swimming beaches sounds more like an
accident waiting to happen than
a fun experience.”
While it’s patently true that it is natural for sharks to stay clear
of the air-bubbling intruders that have
only recently, in evolutionary terms, entered their world (it is only
the lure of free food that will bring them
close enough for good photography), one could argue that these more
extreme human interactions are
reminiscent of no-longer-politically-correct lion-tamers at a circus.
If such behavior would be frowned upon
with wild animals on land, why should we be so enchanted by it
underwater?
John Bantin is the former technical editor of DIVER magazine in the
United Kingdom. For 20 years, he used and reviewed virtually
every piece of dive equipment available in the U.K. and the U.S., and
made around 300 dives per year for that purpose. He is
also a professional underwater photographer, and most recently the
author of Shark Bytes, available at www.undercurrent.org