So what they are saying is; 120 nautical miles is not far and a shark that has been acclimated to human divers at a Bahamian feeding station could turn up pretty much anywhere on the US coast. And, they have actually no idea if this a problem or not.
The numbers of attacks where a diver or bather are bitten is very small. How many interactions where a diver or bather encounter a shark but the shark chooses not to strike or steals the divers catch with no injury to the diver are impossible to count.
So, typical human behaviour... in the absence of knowledge, destructive behaviors will continue until overwhelming evidence is in escapably been presented and then we will continue the practice for decades.....
To quote the video - " Rather than rushing to make conclusions based on fear lets do the science and make our policies based on fact"
- typical human behaviour seems to me to make baseless claims and react...e.g. we nearly exterminated grey nurse sharks in the 60's because, without any proof, they were considered man-eaters. The video clearly calls out no evidence of changes in shark behaviour - some people won't like that...everyone is entitled to their own opinion.
The pigs have been there for years. Every day boats show up and they swim out to get treats. I do not think they venture more than maybe 50 -70 feet from the shoreline. Some people will get in the water and will be standing where the pigs are swimming. Yesterday they were there all day...today they were there.......
If the pigs were the issues there would be daily shark frenzies on these beaches and there would not be any pigs left (they are not great or agile swimmers)
Thanks - so from all these posts my conclusion is that this was just bad luck. The young lady snorkelling was enough to attract the shark. It is a tragedy. My thoughts go out to her and her family.