Many divers beat a path to Fiji to enjoy shark
diving near Pacific Harbor on Viti Levu, where up
to eight different species can turn up to regular yet
frenetic shark feeds. Now you can "adopt" your
own Fijian shark, even if you never cross the ocean
to see it. Mike Neumann of Beqa Adventure Divers
tells us his popular shark-dive operation is working
on an adopt-a-shark program in conjunction with
the United Nations Development Program and the
South Pacific Tourism Organization to raise funds
for shark conservation and research.
Their venture, called My Fiji Shark, aims to help
Fiji's government in implementing and enforcing
shark and ray management and conservation
measures, and funding a few community-based,
five-year pilot projects to create hopefully effective
coastal fisheries management measures. Surplus funds will be used to establish a permanent Shark
Lab research site.
Where they want the funds to come from: shark
lovers who will pay between $50 and $200 a year to
adopt a specific shark that has already been named
(like Batman and Miss America) and is a frequent
visitor to the Shark Reef Marine Reserve near Galoa
Village. (You can also name your own shark if you
fork over $5,000). Natasha Marosi, a former U.S.
criminal defense attorney turned marine scientist
and Beqa's director of conservation, runs the shark
adoption program.
If you've swam with these sharks or just want to
help them get the love they deserve, My Fiji Shark
might be especially interesting. Details are at
www.myfijishark.com