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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!spool.mu.edu!agate!ames!ig!chalup
- From: chalup@presto.ig.com (Michael Chalup)
- Newsgroups: rec.scuba
- Subject: Re: Shark Hunt -- Sharks common in Hawaii?
- Message-ID: <Nov.22.19.07.22.1992.1182@presto.ig.com>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 03:07:23 GMT
- References: <phil.722127244@seidel> <1992Nov19.141347.18450@newssun.med.miami.edu> <1992Nov19.165621.15427@sequent.com>
- Organization: IntelliGenetics, Inc., Mountain View, California USA
- Lines: 66
-
- In article <1992Nov19.165621.15427@sequent.com> kene@sequent.com (Ken Ewing) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov19.141347.18450@newssun.med.miami.edu> dbrown@newssun.med.miami.edu (Daniel Brown) writes:
- >>
- >>There have been references to shark attacks here, but I haven't heard
-
- >
- >said that there are two things in Hawaii that exist is large numbers
- >and that the press is "forbidden" to talk about: huge cockroaches,
- >and sharks. Exactly how the press is "forbidden" is not clear to me,
- >but they are dissuaded from reporting on the prevalence of these
- >things because doing so would hurt the tourist industry.
- >
- >My friend told me how one time she was swimming off the beach and
- >her hand actually hit the back of a shark swimming under her. She
- >had noticed a number of grey shapes beneath her, but had just thought
- >that these were rocks on the bottom. Once she realized that these
- >really were sharks, she immediately left the water. It was then that
- >her Hawaiian friends told there that sharks were common, but that
- >they weren't talked about because it would scare away the tourists.
- >
- >Now, having never been to Hawaii myself (outside of the airport),
- >I might need my understanding corrected. Let me know if that's the case.
- >
- > Ken Ewing
-
- Greatly exagerated (the sharks, but not the roaches). I made 300+
- dives over six years in Hawaii (1981-1987), most islands. Many were
- research dives when I was working as a research assistant at the
- Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology (any current or ex-HIMB'ers out
- there?). Except for a couple of small white tips at Molokini and
- maybe Kona I never saw a shark during that time. I did know a couple
- of spear fishing folk who got into some isolated problems with sharks.
- But at least for unprovoked attacks on divers who weren't spear
- fishing, no incidents. In-water shark spottings were rare. The
- greatest danger to divers was probably their ignorance of local
- conditions; when high surf would make an otherwise safe dive site
- deadly.
-
- Yes, there are sharks in Hawaii waters. Tiger sharks and hammerheads
- are present. Certain factors or particular ocean locations can
- increase the potential for problems; spear fishing in murky water was
- cited in a report of attacks through the early 1980's for more than
- one event. The recent attacks on a swimmer on Maui and surfers on
- Oahu are disturbing. But unless there has been a RADICAL change since
- I left, shark problems are very rare, especially considering the
- number people involved with water sports and commerical marine
- activities.
-
- Why the recent rise in shark problems? Pollution? Food web
- imbalance? Some subtle change associated with the physical
- oceanographic conditions? I'm dubious that an eradication program can
- catch only the 'bad' sharks, making the waters 'safe'. A concerted
- enough effort probably can distroy the shark population with other
- detrimental effects. I'm curious if any of the scientific or
- govermental institutions in Hawaii are lending support to this program.
-
-
- Aloha,
- Mike Chalup
- IntelliGenetics, Inc.
- Internet: chalup@presto.ig.com
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