Shifts in the incidence of shark bites and efficacy of beach-focussed mitigation in Australia

Charlie Huveneers, Craig Blount, Corey Bradshaw, Paul Butcher, Marcus Lincoln Smith, William Macbeth, Daryl McPhee, Natalie Moltschaniwskyj, Victor M. Peddemors, Marcel Green

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)
51 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Shark-human interactions are some of the most pervasive human-wildlife conflicts, and their frequencies are increasing globally. New South Wales (Australia) was the first to implement a broad-scale program of shark-bite mitigation in 1937 using shark nets, which expanded in the late 2010s to include non-lethal measures. Using 196 unprovoked shark-human interactions recorded in New South Wales since 1900, we show that bites shifted from being predominantly on swimmers to 79 % on surfers by the 1980s and increased 2–4-fold. We could not detect differences in the interaction rate at netted versus non-netted beaches since the 2000s, partly because of low incidence and high variance. Although shark-human interactions continued to occur at beaches with tagged-shark listening stations, there were no interactions while SMART drumlines and/or drones were deployed. Our effect-size analyses show that a small increase in the difference between mitigated and non-mitigated beaches could indicate reductions in shark-human interactions. Area-based protection alone is insufficient to reduce shark-human interactions, so we propose a new, globally transferable approach to minimise risk of shark bite more effectively.
Original languageEnglish
Article number115855
Number of pages13
JournalMarine Pollution Bulletin
Volume198
Early online date2 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

Keywords

  • shark attack
  • shark deterrent
  • shark mitigation
  • beach meshing
  • SMART drumline
  • drone
  • drumline
  • surfing
  • swimming
  • ocean
  • beach safety
  • human-wildlife conflict

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