Matthew S. Schwartz npr.org Tue, 28 Jul 2020 09:49 UTC
Julie Dimperio Holowach was laughing as she and her daughter paddled into the water Monday off the coast of Maine's Bailey Island.
Suddenly Holowach, who was wearing a black wetsuit, started flailing, witness Tom Whyte told The Boston Globe. Her daughter swam back to shore, dropped to her knees and screamed for help, he said.
Nearby kayakers brought Holowach's badly injured body to shore. By the time paramedics arrived, the 63-year-old seasonal resident from New York City was already dead, killed in the first fatal shark attack in Maine's history.
Some researchers say the waters around Maine have more white sharks than they used to, as the predators go in search of seal meat.
"I think it's generally accepted that the increase in number of seals is leading to more white sharks coming closer to shore during some months," Nick Whitney, a senior scientist at the New England Aquarium, told Maine Public Radio.
After the attack, officials recovered a fragment of tooth. They sent the tooth to Gregory Skomal, a shark biologist at Massachusetts' Division of Marine Fisheries, who positively identified the shark as a great white.
"This is the only confirmed fatality in Maine waters from a shark attack," said the commissioner of Maine's Department of Marine Resources, Patrick Keliher, at a news conference Tuesday.
He urged swimmers and boaters to use caution near Bailey Island and to avoid swimming near schooling fish or seals. Schools of fish will attract seals, Keliher said. "The seals, in return, will attract sharks."
According to MPR, Keliher said Holowach's wetsuit might have made her look like a seal.
The only other confirmed shark attack in Maine waters happened 10 years ago in Eastport, he said. A scuba diver caught that attack on film.
Shark attacks have been on a steady decrease over the past decade, with only five fatal attacks in 2019, according to data from the International Shark Attack File, maintained by the Florida Museum of Natural History and the University of Florida. The decrease is because of advances in beach safety, medical treatment and public awareness, they say.
Shark attacks on humans are "incredibly rare," Gavin Naylor, program director for the International Shark Attack File, told The New York Times. "We like to tell people there is a much higher chance of being struck by lightning than being bitten by a shark."
Scary. On a tangent, I went to npr after reading this and thumbed through some articles. The take on Barr's appearance yesterday was heavily slanted left and giving very little substance, as usual, sadly. Not even worth reading - hard to believe this passes as journalism anymore. So then I searched for portland riots and got a wall of portland protest articles. It's a joke.
Shark attacks have been on a steady decrease over the past decade, with only five fatal attacks in 2019, according to data from the International Shark Attack File, maintained by the Florida Museum of Natural History and the University of Florida.
3) But, article from 2/27/19 says they're on the rise:
The news headlines are what caught Stephen Midway's attention. It all seemed so unusual to him. Researchers would later chalk it up to especially warm water off the coast of North Carolina during...
Playing with statistics? Naw they'd never do that! (Sarcasm.)
R.C.
P.s., A dear surf dog friend of mine's shark attack is one of the earliest ones on the Florida Shark Attack File records. We still surf.
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