drrich2
Contributor
Okay, let's look at what I saw at the shark feeding dives with tigers, lemons and at times bulls out of Florida, and consider the issue that fed sharks might associate humans with food and accost random humans they encounter elsewhere.
What I saw was an ice chest with chopped fish would have the drain plug pulled, so a scent trail run out for awhile till the boat stopped. That brought a tiger shark in. It wasn't just waiting for a conditioned shark to wander by and see us.
When a tiger shark showed, it might cruise around, and in pretty short order go to the shark feeder. If the shark were coming in to check out random humans at close range to see if they had food, the paying customer spectators would be in more danger. Yes, sharks may approach the rest of us, too, but they seem to have a pretty good idea who's got the food.
So let's say a tiger shark who's attended some shark feedings cruises elsewhere and detects divers or snorkelers in the distance, and associates the sound of regulator discharge, boat motors or what-have-you with getting fed enough to go check it out.
Moray eels accustomed to getting lion fish sometimes accost dives in frighteningly direct, close quarters. Will a large tiger shark come get in somebody's face, or grab them, because it thinks they might have a fish?
Seems if that were likely we'd hear of a lot more cases of attacks. What seems more plausible is that these sharks, having a range of senses, can detect at some distance whether any of the humans have a crate with big hunks of dead fish, and if so which has it. If none of the above, the shark will likely move off.
A shark that doesn't move off is one we can't confirm shark feeding was a factor in, as that shark at some point was after something other than what shark feeders provide.
Tiger sharks aren't moray eels, alligators or bears. The practical realities of dealing with them may experientially be different than we might've anticipated.
What I saw was an ice chest with chopped fish would have the drain plug pulled, so a scent trail run out for awhile till the boat stopped. That brought a tiger shark in. It wasn't just waiting for a conditioned shark to wander by and see us.
When a tiger shark showed, it might cruise around, and in pretty short order go to the shark feeder. If the shark were coming in to check out random humans at close range to see if they had food, the paying customer spectators would be in more danger. Yes, sharks may approach the rest of us, too, but they seem to have a pretty good idea who's got the food.
So let's say a tiger shark who's attended some shark feedings cruises elsewhere and detects divers or snorkelers in the distance, and associates the sound of regulator discharge, boat motors or what-have-you with getting fed enough to go check it out.
Moray eels accustomed to getting lion fish sometimes accost dives in frighteningly direct, close quarters. Will a large tiger shark come get in somebody's face, or grab them, because it thinks they might have a fish?
Seems if that were likely we'd hear of a lot more cases of attacks. What seems more plausible is that these sharks, having a range of senses, can detect at some distance whether any of the humans have a crate with big hunks of dead fish, and if so which has it. If none of the above, the shark will likely move off.
A shark that doesn't move off is one we can't confirm shark feeding was a factor in, as that shark at some point was after something other than what shark feeders provide.
Tiger sharks aren't moray eels, alligators or bears. The practical realities of dealing with them may experientially be different than we might've anticipated.