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Friday, June 6, 2025

An unnecessary shark frenzy

by

402 days ago
20240430

Good sense pre­vailed in the end and the To­ba­go House of As­sem­bly (THA) with­drew the ill-ad­vised $10,000 boun­ty for the cap­ture of the bull shark that at­tacked a British tourist on Fri­day.

How­ev­er, for the few hours that the poster with the of­fer of the re­ward was cir­cu­lat­ed on so­cial me­dia, it had the ef­fect of sen­sa­tion­al­is­ing the shark at­tack and per­pe­trat­ing mis­in­for­ma­tion, en­cour­ag­ing harm to an en­dan­gered species.

That is why it is so im­por­tant, in the af­ter­math of the in­ci­dent in which 64-year-old British na­tion­al Pe­ter Smith was crit­i­cal­ly in­jured, to avert any fu­ture fren­zies by rais­ing aware­ness about sharks and their eco­log­i­cal val­ue.

While fish­er­men and res­i­dents of coastal com­mu­ni­ties in par­tic­u­lar need to bet­ter un­der­stand this apex preda­tor, all cit­i­zens should be en­light­ened about this crea­ture, which faces a height­ened threat here where bake and shark is a pop­u­lar del­i­ca­cy.

It must be em­pha­sised that the threat is much greater for the sharks than the hu­mans who pop­u­late our two is­lands.

It was a wise move on the part of the au­thor­i­ties in To­ba­go to close the stretch of beach­es in the vicin­i­ty of Cour­land Bay on the is­land’s north coast where the at­tack oc­curred.

But the next ma­jor ac­tion, that un­for­tu­nate an­nounce­ment of a boun­ty on the shark by Chief Sec­re­tary Far­ley Au­gus­tine, seemed to have been a spur-of-the-mo­ment de­ci­sion based on a mis­un­der­stand­ing of the sit­u­a­tion.

It would have been bet­ter to con­sult with the In­sti­tute of Ma­rine Af­fairs (IMA) or seek the guid­ance of a ma­rine bi­ol­o­gist.

Bear­ing in mind that there are plen­ty of sharks in T&T wa­ters, in­clud­ing nurse sharks, and small reef sharks, along with the black tips and white tips usu­al­ly seen in deep­er wa­ters, there was the po­ten­tial for un­for­tu­nate in­ter­ac­tions be­tween sharks and hu­mans.

Much of the alarm over Fri­day’s in­ci­dent was be­cause shark at­tacks are rare in T&T’s wa­ters, par­tic­u­lar­ly so close to shore — just ten me­tres from the shore where Mr Smith was bathing.

The size of the bull shark, be­lieved to have been be­tween eight and 10 feet long, was al­so cause for alarm, made worse by the wide­ly held but dis­tort­ed view of these crea­tures as blood­thirsty killing ma­chines.

How­ev­er, bear­ing in mind that last year there were 91 shark at­tacks with 14 fa­tal­i­ties world­wide, there is no need to think that a man-eat­ing crea­ture is lurk­ing in the seas around us. In­stead, make this a teach­able mo­ment, an op­por­tu­ni­ty to en­light­en the pop­u­la­tion about the crit­i­cal role played by sharks in main­tain­ing the bal­ance of na­ture. They are a valu­able part of the ocean en­vi­ron­ment and must be pro­tect­ed.

In ad­di­tion to fos­ter­ing a bet­ter un­der­stand­ing of sharks and their val­ue to our ma­rine en­vi­ron­ment, it is al­so im­por­tant to pro­mote aware­ness of what to do in the event of a shark at­tack.

The many pan­icked re­spons­es to shark sight­ings in the hours af­ter the in­ci­dent, ap­peared to have been in­spired more by the film “Jaws” than an un­der­stand­ing of what should be done in the un­like­ly event of an at­tack.

Guid­ance and sup­port from ex­perts — and there are a few at the IMA and the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies (UWI) — should help us avoid un­for­tu­nate mis­steps in the fu­ture.


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