But sharks don't seem to prevent people from swimming in Florida, where there are far more attacks.
The Nantucket Sound beaches, Craigville, etc. don't have the seal population that attracts the sharks. Seals have been seen on the outer Cape beaches for awhile now. I believe there have also been shark sightings in Cape Cod Bay.It's a seal problem that created a shark problem. Both species are federally protected so there is no chance of a cull and it wouldn't be appropriate. Limited cull of the seals would be the right place to start.
But the reality is, like South Africa, Western Australia and much of California, we now have a permanent, seasonal White Shark population. The main problem for people is that the ocean side beaches on the upper cape have (a) a huge seal population and (b) a physical beach that becomes deep very rapidly. Going in above thigh depth there is simply unwise from about mid July to October. No shark concerns so far on Nantucket Sound beaches. The shallow bay side beaches are fine, but the channels, such are near Cold Storage in Dennis, and the water off the jetty, are not safe. The juvenile white sharks in the Bay are chasing fish, not seals and can be drawn into those waters. The juveniles are also worse at identifying natural prey items.
But sharks don't seem to prevent people from swimming in Florida, where there are far more attacks.
Are we seriously wondering if the ocean's & climate are warmer? It is not really worth providing evidence at this point.
Feeling the Heat in the NW Atlantic
I'm not biting, there's thousands of articles and scientific research on the topic, global organizations, local initiatives. I think it'd be more on point to discuss how political ideology shapes one's viewpoints about totally unrelated issues and that also is unlikely to be discussed in an objective manner.Did you read the article? It says nothing at all about what has happened. It is only about what "climate models project." Quoting: "Climate models project that bottom temperatures in the Atlantic along the U.S. East Coast may rise by up to 4.3 °C (7.7 °F) by the end of the century."
This is no evidence at all about what is happening or has happened.
Obviously swimming in the ocean when sharks are around is dangerous and you are playing a reverse odds lottery. But statistically speaking not swimming due to sharks is kind of like not flying out of fear of an airplane accident. Drowning is WAYYY more likely to kill you (so is driving to the beach etc..) and sharks aren't even near the top-10 of animals that kill people. Its the fear and mysterious vulnerability of being in the water that freaks people out about shark attacks and maybe that Jaws is one of the best movies ever.
1. Wear mosquito repellant wherever you go, probably net around your entire body
2. Avoid other humans
3. Get rid of your dogs
4. Don't order the escargot
These are the world's deadliest animals
White Sharks are a different type of attack than the numerous attacks in Fla.
WTF does where I've been have to do with the # of sharks, and shark attacks vs mosquitos on the earth? I've never been to Africa (technically I've been to Morocco, but I don't think that truly counts) but I know there are mosquitos there. I have been to Nauset Beach (not where this happened by the way?!), Newcomb Hollow, Cahoun Hollow, the Beachcomber, Coast Guard Beach, Marconi, Longnook, Ballston, Great Pond, Long Pond, Gull Pond and only the latter 3 I'd say are safe from sharks. Totally besides the point though.This reads exactly like someone that has not been to Nauset beach and read any of the dozens of shark incidents over the years. Shark attacks at a national level, not scary. Shark attacks in waters that are brimming with known shark populations...totally different. The outer cape is now loaded with sharks. We are talking about an environment much more akin to Yellowstone and bears vs southeast CT and bears.
Rising water temps are also part of the problem
From your article, as the author states, there is no certainty as to temperature's influence in this, if any. Food source, on the other hand, is an obvious reason for the population increase.
The article specifically denies a causation link and describe the sharks found as being young and "cute."Thats a junk article from a junk website. And no one is even sure of the species of shark involved yet. So you don’t know if it was one indigenous to that area.
From your article, as the author states, there is no certainty as to temperature's influence in this, if any. Food source, on the other hand, is an obvious reason for the population increase.
While these two factors were correlated, it doesn’t necessarily mean that increased water temperature caused northward shark migration. Instead, Kajiura wrote, the sharks could also be “following their food,” which would be subject to the same temperature-based pressures.
If the food is migrating northwards because the water stays warmer there due to climate change and the sharks follow the food...
Critical thinking is a good skill to have.
Seals are their food and the seals have been migrating southward, not northward. The reason is their protected status, not the water temperature.
Other benefit will be the bass fishery will come back to the way it once was.
With many "temperature studies" being proven fraudulent...numbers made up and such, it is foolish to put any stock in assumptions such as these. I think it much more likely, as has been mentioned earlier, that the seal populations have been increasing commensurate with their increased legal protection...and therefore need to find new areas to feed in. So blind acceptance of "research" about temperature being the reason for this activity, from such critically acclaimed think tanks like Daily Beast, is not a direction a critical thinker would logically go in.If the food is migrating northwards because the water stays warmer there due to climate change and the sharks follow the food...
Critical thinking is a good skill to have.
You have a very funny looking head.
You have a very funny looking head.
Rising water temps are also part of the problem
You must be getting tired!I’ve been swimming in those waters for 25 years.
Deepster doesn't believe the water is getting warmer. Bwahahahahaha, I love this place.
The guy who was eaten 4 weeks ago was life starred into Boston and is STILL in hospital.
Now, now. Don't exaggerate. I'm told by experts once a shark realized the person isn't a seal they let go and swim away. It's just a case of mistaken identity.
How about another slob from a different angle (oh and the fish too!)
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