Despite 30 years of commercial
marine-animal feeds across perhaps
40 countries and more than 200
operations, there are plenty of
people who want it stopped. At
stake is a big industry. It’s reported
that the 30-odd feeding ops in the
Bahamas generated $65 million last
year, and that stingray feeds are
responsible for half the diving
dollars spent in Grand Cayman.
The controversy most recently
flared in Florida, where the state
Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWCC) in February
voted unanimously to have staff
develop a rule to ban fish feeding
for a host of reasons. Immediately,
moneyed interests in the dive
industry — PADI, DEMA (Diving
Equipment and Marketing Association),
and some dive publications
— got organized to overturn the
ruling. Their opponents were a
financial cut below them: spearfishing
interests and local and national
environmental groups.
On September 7, after the
FWCC listened to these groups,
they ignored their previous ruling
and refused to ban fish feeding,
urging the sides to work together
and come up with a plan for
consideration in May. Afterwards
an article in the Ft. Lauderdale Sun
Times called the decision “a colossal
cop-out or a cave-in to special interests.” Regardless, it was
certainly a victory for the diving
industry.
The Arguments For and Agin
RISK TO HUMANS AND MARINE
CREATURES: Pro-feeding groups
point out that, with more than a
million shark-feed dives, there has
yet to be a fatality. Anti-feeding
factions say this ignores the divers
who have been injured, sometimes seriously, because of feeds. The profeeding
side has been disingenuous
if not deceptive in its remarks. For
example, Richard Finkus, a Florida
dive shop owner who has taken
hundreds on feeding dives, told the
Commission in July that, “if done in
an organized and responsible
manner, these dives are 100 percent
safe with no harm to animals, the
environment, or to divers or
snorkelers.” Yet, more than ten years ago Doug Perrine, a marine
biologist and photojournalist,
reported that many divers feeding
fish, or even diving at organized
feeding sites, have sustained
lacerations of faces, hands, arms,
torsos, and even loss of fingers.
... A victory for the
dive industry is
called "a colossal
copout or a cave-in
to special interests." |
According to the July, 1998,
“Shark News 11,” published by the
Florida Museum of Natural History,
more than a dozen injuries have
occurred on shark dives in the
Bahamas. While impossible to get
accurate figures on injuries —
operations engaged in feeding are
vigorous in their damage control —
there are verifiable incidents.
Jeff Torode, co-owner of South
Florida Diving Headquarters and a
proponent of feeding, sustained a
serious hand injury while feeding
eels. A Boca Raton man diving near
a feeding area, but not himself
feeding, had a large moray bite him
on the leg. After a supervised
grouper feed at Walker’s Cay, a
regularly fed barracuda bit a diver’s
fingers as he made the sign for
shark, requiring 15 stitches. And, in
an item that speaks to molestation
of human and marine creature
alike, the September Skin Diver contains an interview with Key
Largo’s Spencer Slate. When asked
his craziest stunt, he replied: “The
time Perry, the moray eel, bit me. I
was so mad that I punched him in the nose. He responded by biting
me again, only this time caused 17
stitches worth of hurt, and it was
caught on tape.” Slate admits to
being bitten over 50 times across
the span of his feedings, but jokes
that: “We always sell more video
tapes of the dive on days I get bit.”
An indeterminate number of
divers in the Bahamas have been
injured during shark feeds, including
a German woman who was
bitten on the head at a shark
feeding site on a non-feeding day.
More than a dozen attacks on
feeders in the Bahamas have
occurred, including a DM who was
seriously bitten on the arm and leg.
In the Maldives an operator who
feeds by hand and mouth has been
bitten four times by sharks, once so
severely he was evacuated to the
U.S. for treatment.
While there has been no
documented fatality, George
Burgess, a noted University of
Florida shark researcher, has
opined, “Sooner or later, some
tourist will suffer a very serious
injury or die during one of these
operations. It’s not a matter of
conjecture. It will happen. It’s just a
matter of time.”
While most feeding is unregulated,
in many locations it’s restricted
or prohibited, including
the Egyptian coasts of the Red Sea,
many locations in Hawaii, and
several National Marine Sanctuaries.
In the Great Barrier Reef
Marine Park, shark feeding is
prohibited. Fish feeding is allowed,
but only under permit and tight
restriction.
ALTERATION OF LONG-TERM
BEHAVIOR: The pro-feeding camp
contends that marine animals are
opportunistic feeders, and the
small amount of food offered does
not foster dependency. But they
offer no evidence.
The other side has some
science. In a paper to the FWCC, Dr. William Alevizon, scientific
advisor to Florida-based Reef Relief,
comments that land-dwelling
opportunistic predators such as
bears and marine counterparts
such as dolphins, conditioned by
regular feeding, lose their natural
wariness of humans and become
aggressive toward them. Bear feeds
have long been banned in national
parks, and dolphin feeds have been
banned by the National Marine
Fisheries Service for this and the
additional reason that fed dolphins
eventually stop discriminating safe
from unsafe feed sources. That’s
why they get trapped in shrimp
trawling nets. Dr. Alevizon suggests
that piscine opportunistic feeders,
like sharks, might react similarly.
Of course, any diver knows
that when sharks congregate at the sound of boats approaching, or
grouper and barracuda closely
approach when a BC pocket is
opened or hand extended, or eels
leave hiding places to greet you,
they are not behaving as fish
unaffected by humans. It’s not
natural.
IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT:
Anti-feed factions say that
the unnatural aggregation of
sharks or large predators in a
small area will eventually reduce
stocks of nearby fish in the
creatures’ food chain. More
aggressive species have been
observed dominating and reducing
populations of less aggressive
fishes in feeding areas.
Feed proponents say these
feeds allow divers to become educated about creatures such as
sharks, thereby increasing appreciation
and promoting protection.
Anti-feed people argue that divers
already appreciate sea creatures,
and any boost they get from
feeding them is inconsequential.
The Raw Politics
The scuba industry has been
remarkably successful in preventing
and resisting federal and state
regulation. It fights to maintain the
status quo, no matter how small
potential breaches may appear. For
this Florida fight, PADI retained an
attorney-lobbyist to orchestrate the
pro-feeding campaign. Many
people expect PADI to assist in a
formal legal challenge if given an
unfavorable future FWCC ruling.
PADI’s position is viewed by
some as an abrogation of the
responsibilities implied by Project
AWARE, advertised as the dive
industry’s leading nonprofit
organization operating on behalf of
the aquatic environment and its
resources, and particularly its international public awareness
campaign, Protect the Sharks.
In July, Scuba Diving’s editor
David Taylor promoted a profeeding
position in his magazine.
They also had an online mechanism for petitioning the FWCC,
which offered only the chance to
express disagreement with regulation.
... the pro-feeding
coalition will focus
on making feeds
maximally safe for
divers, marine
creatures, and the
environment.
- John Stewart, DEMA |
The Florida-based Scuba Radio
sponsored a luxury bus, replete with free food, beverages, and
prizes, that took divers to the
September FWCC hearing because
“... what the commission needs to
hear is your personal experience
with this type of diving and your
objections to the proposed ban.”
One of the more interesting
events involved Dr. Russell Nelson,
head of the Florida Division of
Fisheries. On July 7, Dr. Nelson
presented comments that concluded:
“Staff does not recommend
regulatory action at this
time.” Instead, they recommended
forming a working group of
interested constituencies to
develop voluntary controls. A few
days later, the Sun-Sentinel reported
that, by his own admission, Dr.
Nelson had visited pornographic
websites on his state computer and
on state time. Dr. Nelson resigned,
but did not remain unemployed
for long. In September, he released
a report for DEMA concluding that
total prohibition of feeds by the
FWCC was not warranted, and, if
regulatory approaches are deemed necessary, the FWCC should look
to “.... the voluntary adoption of
industry standards and specifically
the use of special management
areas and public information and
education efforts.”
Of course, the pro-ban side is
not without its strange bedfellows.
Florida spearfishing interests have
been a major impetus for a state
shark-feeding ban. Concerned
about increasing aggressiveness of
sharks toward spearfishers, some of
their members have made outrageous
statements to influence the
commission, even conjuring up an
association between shark finning
and shark feeds. Some people
believe that the strident position of
at least one spearfisherman,
Stephen Picardi, webmaster of the
“Ban Shark Feeding” website, has
not helped his side.
The Outcome
The FWCC met in a grueling
day-long session on September 7 to
hear massive testimony of widelyvarying
quality. After considering
the input, it suspended any further
consideration until May 2001,
thereby maintaining the status quo.
Meanwhile, the Commission
recommended that all factions
work together to arrive at methods
of feeding that minimally impact
the environment. In short, the profeeding
side prevailed.
The day following the vote,
John Stewart, in charge of
marketing for DEMA, told
Undercurrent that the pro-feeding
coalition has every intention of
launching a work group that will
be “inclusionary, not exclusionary.”
He indicated that the
deliberations will be entirely
public and hoped to have recommendations
to the FWCC by next
April. He indicated they will focus
on making feeds maximally safe
for divers, marine creatures, and
the environment.
A spokesperson for the losing
side was less enthusiastic, telling
Undercurrent: “It’s a real disappointment
to see the body responsible
for protecting Florida’s marine life
respond in the way they did to the
kind of dog-and-pony show orchestrated
by the dive industry. It’s a sad
but true commentary in our
democracy that those with the
greatest financial resources and
expertise at manipulating the
political system usually get their
way.”
As to the various factions
working together cooperatively,
there is basis for skepticism given
the track record. So far, we as divers and stewards of an embarrassment
of marine riches have not acquitted
ourselves well in addressing this
topic. Looking at what has transpired
thus far, the welfare of the
marine animals at the center of this
controversy seems a footnote.
Those who have something of
substance to contribute may email
the Executive Director of the
FWCC, Dr. Alan Egbert, at
gfcmail@gfc.state.fl.us. DEMA (John
Stewart, john@divemarketing.com)
and Reef Relief (reef@bellsouth.net)
are also appropriate contacts.
- Ben Davison