Bob DBF
Contributor
...well yeah calling superman isn't going to help.
I've read about him going back in time, so don't sell him short.
Bob
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...well yeah calling superman isn't going to help.
@JohnnyQuest - your assumption that someone not being American meaning they "probably would not have DAN" has me a bit baffled.....DAN Asia Pacific does a good job of covering we non American divers this side of the world.
First, correction to my earlier post - the victim total was five, not four. I was reading an article quickly and was thrown off because the victims were subdivided by nationality. Four were injured on Dec. 1 and a fifth was killed on Dec. 5 after the beaches reopened.
I presume that the "world's leading expert on OWT" would be Dr. Elke Bojanowski?
Same shark linked to three attacks in Egypt
About Red Sea Sharks
Seems like she has an extensive photo ID project (881 identified individuals from 2004 to present) going on OWTs in the Red Sea, and from talking to a researcher who was at the International Shark Attack File at the time the belief was that one OWT was responsible for at least two of the attacks due to a distinctive cut on the dorsal seen in video footage of the attacks. Said shark however was not believed to be the OWT caught after the initial attacks; neither it nor the mako contained human remains (tissue was removed from at least two of the first four victims, although whether it was ingested is an open question).
As far as OWT behavior, the impression I've gotten is that given their environment (open ocean with limited feeding opportunities), they don't pass up meals. I don't buy the "developing a taste for humans" trope; applying that to this instance would be concluding that two is a trend.
Overall, the Sharm El Sheikh attacks are really hard to pin down even seven years later; at the time there seems to have been a lot of BS flying around and an authoritarian government dependent on tourism can't exactly be counted on to provide an unbiased account of the matter.
There used to be a guy in Alaska that spent lots of time with grizzlies in Alaska (or maybe it was brown bears). Anyway he would take folks in for bear encounters and spend time near them. Did this for several years and then one day he and a customer were found dead from a bear attack. Same for any apex predator. You can have lots of encounters and one day the predator wakes up with a headache, hungry, feeling territorial, just ticked off, or whatever, and the encounter does not go well. I have seen cats, dogs, and some other animals take a nip, swat, kick, just because for some reason they got annoyed on a particular day by human presence.
considering that the average of americans who visit cocos its suppose to be higher to 50% , in my opinion authorities over there must do something about it . for example , we pay $400 dlls for the park fee . multiplied 3000 divers each year its $1.2million dlls . They need that money to protect the island from illegal fishing., Also Live aboard companies , i guess they have less bookings than before the incident. So if they have to take away (dont known how ) one or two tiger sharks in order decrease the risk of encounter with a diver and to protect thousands of other animals there , I think its the best thing to do, with the help of some shark protect foundation.