Chance of shark attack here slim
Marisa O’Neil
After two recent shark attacks in Florida, some are wondering about
what’s swimming in local waters.
And while it isn’t impossible for attacks to occur in the waters
off Newport Beach, it isn’t very likely, experts said. In fact, it’s
really, really unlikely, shark expert Christopher Lowe said.
“You have a better chance of being struck and killed by blue ice
falling from an airplane while surfing, than of being attacked by a
shark,” said Lowe, a biology professor at Cal State Long Beach.
“You’re more likely to be killed driving or walking to the beach than
you are to be attacked by a shark while you’re there.”
The last fatal shark attack in Southern California was some 15
years ago, he estimated. And the cause of death was debatable,
because it wasn’t clear if bite marks were made before or after the
person’s death.
Newport Beach lifeguards could not remember any local shark
attacks on a person in the past 50 years.
But that doesn’t keep people from worrying about what’s sharing
the water with them, Newport Beach lifeguard Capt. Eric Bauer said.
Those worries have increased since the recent attacks that killed a
girl and critically injured a boy in Florida.
“We’ve gotten a couple calls,” Bauer said. “Because of the shark
attacks in Florida, there’s a heightened awareness. We just remind
people that’s where the sharks live. They should be keeping their
eyes out for sharks.”
The department did send lifeguards a shark-bite memo last week,
Bauer said. The memo offered tips about how to avoid and respond to
shark bites, he said.
If someone was bitten by a shark here, lifeguards would likely
send out a boat or personal watercraft to rescue the victim, rather
than putting a lifeguard at risk, he said.
The most recent close encounter near Newport Beach came two years
ago when a dead whale floated just outside the harbor mouth. Two
great white sharks started feasting on the carcass.
Lifeguards spent five hours towing the whale 15 miles out to sea,
with the sharks taking nibbles along the way.
“That was of some concern, but they were more interested in eating
the whale carcass,” Bauer said.
Some great white sharks do prey off Southern California’s coast,
but most don’t come close to shore, Lowe said. Other sharks in local
waters include soup fin sharks, leopard sharks and smooth-hound
sharks, none of which pose a threat to humans, he said.
Most people who are attacked by sharks never see so much as a fin
before they are bitten, Lowe said. Like most predators, they employ
the element of surprise, and if they know they’ve been seen, they may
not attack.
If you do see a shark, he recommends calmly getting out of the
water -- while keeping your eye on the shark.
Experts still aren’t clear why sharks attack humans. It could be
because a shark thinks a human is food, or it may attack out of
defense.
The best thing to keep in mind is that the chances of a shark
attack are negligible, Lowe said. But people should remember that the
ocean is the shark’s home, and there’s no way to tell where they’ll
be or what they’ll do.
“We don’t understand why people do what we do, and we can talk to
each other,” Lowe said. “How do you go about finding out why a shark
does what it does?”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.