Strange things are happening in Australia. According to a report on sharkyear magazine and the international business times a shark has been sentenced to death, because of a suspected attack on a diver. "A catch and kill order was issued and staff have been sent to the dive
area about 180km east of Esperance to deploy capture gear."
While reading the article I realized, that victim was diving in an area that is known for various species of large sharks "A spokesman for Surf Life Saving said the coast off Esperance was
dangerous for divers, as many big sharks are seen in the area on a
regular basis. The species of shark is unknown, but both tiger sharks
and great white sharks are known to the area."
So how are they going to determine which shark
to kill, if they don't even know the species that was responsible for the attack? Now I can understand the urge to do something to make the ocean safer for divers after an attack, but to just go out and indiscriminately catch and kill a shark doesn't accomplish anything.
Cheers,
Martin Graf
CEO Shark Diver
About Shark Diver.
As a global leader in commercial shark diving and conservation initiatives Shark Diver has spent the past decade engaged for sharks around the world. Our blog highlights all aspects of both of these dynamic and shifting worlds. You can reach us directly at staff@sharkdiver.com
2 comments:
Now that air transportation is the norm, should we kill all the birds so they won’t get caught in the jet engines? Same lack of reasoning as swimming uninvited in a shark’s domain.
Now that air transportation is the norm, should we kill all the birds so they won’t get caught in the jet engines? Same lack of reasoning as swimming uninvited in a shark’s domain.
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