GEN-Swimmers Warned After 7 Shark Bites Florida Coast

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Apr 14, 2001 - 06:35 AM

Swimmers Warned After 7 Shark Bites in a Week Along Florida Coast By Janelle A. Weber Associated Press Writer

MIAMI (AP) - At least seven people were attacked by sharks along Florida's east coast this week as sharks hunted for fish along their northward migratory route. Thousands of beachgoers were warned to stay out of the water after sharks were sighted and bites - none of them life-threatening - were reported.

A 16-year-old from Charleston, S.C., and a 12-year-old were bitten on the ankles Friday while surfing separately at New Smyrna Beach, said Capt. Rob Horster of the Volusia County Beach Patrol. Three other surfers and a wave-boarder were bitten by sharks on Wednesday and Thursday in the same area.

"These are not the kinds of attacks that were made famous in 'Jaws,'" said George Burgess, director of the International Shark Attack File in Gainesville.

"Sharks sometimes misinterpret the splashing of humans in the water as being normal prey items," Burgess said. "In most cases they realize very quickly that it's not a mullet and go."

Shark bites are common at New Smyrna Beach because the nearby Ponce de Leon Inlet is a site for fish spawning and schooling, Horster said.

Farther south at Waveland Beach, a man received a deep bite to his right ankle and lower leg Thursday.

Most injuries were not severe, but 22-year-old Richard Lloyd's gash was deep enough to partly sever a tendon. The Orange City surfer, attacked Thursday off New Smyrna Beach, said doctors would need to operate to repair the damage.

Shark bites typically happen in conditions of breaking surf, undertow, tidal currents and reduced visibility, Burgess said.

The sharks responsible for the nips are generally small, between four and five feet, said Dr. Bob Hueter, director of the Center for Shark Research at the Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota. "That's their turf," he said. "You're going into their home."

According to the International Shark Attack File, there were 34 unprovoked shark attacks confirmed in Florida last year. Of the 79 unprovoked shark attack confirmed worldwide, it lists 10 as fatal.

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On the Net:

Shark Attack File: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Sharks/ISAF/ISAF.htm

AP-ES-04-14-01 0634EDT © Copyright 2001 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

-- Anonymous, April 14, 2001

Answers

Don't they know they can get Mercury poisoning from biting us?

-- Anonymous, April 14, 2001

Too bad one wasn't my ex-husband. Oops, did I say that! For shame.

I hope it won't be a long season of shark bites. Nothing like that to mess up your day, or your vacation!

-- Anonymous, April 14, 2001


Barefoot, I thought I had better post that article, before you went for a dip.

Sheeple, it would take a big shark, with a big mouth to be able to bite my Ex! Thanks for the laugh when I read your post.

-- Anonymous, April 14, 2001


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