The chances of getting bitten by a shark while you're swimming at the beach are surprisingly low
Advertisement
Kelly McLaughlin
May 26, 2023, 20:51 IST
Great White sharks are just one type of shark known to occasionally attack humans.Pterantula/Wikimedia Commons
The chances of being attacked and killed by a shark are one in 3.75 million.
The US and Australia consistently report the most shark attacks each year.
Advertisement
Shark attacks are one of the most notoriously feared dangers to beach-going humans — but how likely is it that you'd actually get bitten?
Despite the mass fear surrounding the deadly animals, the chances of being attacked and killed by a shark are one in 3.75 million, according to the International Wildlife Museum.
The chances are lower than the possibility of dying by a lightning strike, a firework accident, or a stroke.
The most common place to be attacked in the US is Florida, with 912 attacks since 1837.
Hawaii, California, and South Carolina have all had between 100 and 200 attacks in that timeframe.
It appears that last weekend's attack in Stone Harbor was uncommon, with only 15 attacks recorded in New Jersey since 1837.
The teenage girl who was attacked was in the water when a shark bit her foot. She survived and was walking around on crutches shortly after getting stitches at Cape Regional Medical Center, CBS News reported.
Advertisement
The attack at Stone Harbor followed an attack in the Florida Keys just days prior. Two men were bitten by sharks while fishing last week, CNN reported.
The US had the most recorded shark attacks in 2022
Sharks that attack humans are usually hanging out near the shore in search of food.Gerard Soury/Getty Images
Around the world, there have been more than 3,000 shark attacks recorded in the last 50 years.
Australia, meanwhile, ranked second with nine attacks, but no fatalities. This is lower than Australia's five-year average of 15 attacks per year.
Shark attacks in the US are concentrated in Florida
Oceans off of Australia are known for being the habitat for deadly sharks, including the Great White, Bull, and Tiger sharks.
Advertisement
Most shark attacks occur near the shore, typically in sandbars or between sandbars where sharks can become trapped during low tide.
In deeper areas, like spots with steep drop-offs, sharks congregate because creatures they feed on also gather there.
Shark attacks are lower than in the past
Industrial factory chimneys like these are contributing to climate change, which is warming ocean waters and forcing sharks to move inland, closer to humans.Stock Photo/Getty Images
The number of unprovoked shark attacks worldwide in 2022 was 57 — significantly lower than the annual average between 2017-2021, which was 70.
"It's likely that fatalities are down because some areas have recently implemented rigorous beach safety protocols, especially in Australia," Gavin Naylor, director of the Florida Museum of Natural History's Florida Program for Shark Research, told Forbes in February.
But it's important to note that shark attack numbers tend to fluctuate and just because they've been lower recently doesn't necessarily signal a continuous downward trend. Time will tell if this is the case.
Advertisement
Meanwhile, beachgoers, especially in hot spots in the US and Australia, should try to avoid waters with sharks as much as possible.
What to do if you're attacked by a shark
A tiger shark.Getty Images
If you see a shark while in the water, keep your eyes on it while slowly swimming back to shore. Eye contact signals to the shark you know of its presence and are not easy, unsuspecting prey.
If you see a shark charge and it attacks, hit its eyes or nose and, if possible, stick your hands into its gills and pull hard.
While humans can sometimes be victims of sharks, far more sharks are victimized by humans each year.
Shark attacks worldwide are concentrated in the US
The worldwide shark population is in decline because of over-fishing — approximately 100 million sharks are killed every year by fisheries, according to the International Wildlife Museum.
Advertisement
Moreover, the destruction of their habitat due to climate change has forced sharks closer to land, thus closer to humans.
Malin Pinsky, an associate professor at Rutgers University's Department of Ecology, perhaps put it best in an interview with The Guardian in 2021:
"Climate change is scrambling our ocean ecosystems and sometimes it produces surprises with a whole lot of teeth."
{{}}
NewsletterSIMPLY PUT - where we join the dots to inform and inspire you. Sign up for a weekly brief collating many news items into one untangled thought delivered straight to your mailbox.