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Date: Mon, 05 Nov 2001 17:08:57 -0500
From: "John M. Taylor" <johnt@ca*.co*>
To: techdiver@aquanaut.com
Subject: Fla. Commission Bans Shark Feeding
http://wire.ap.org/APnews/center_story.html?FRONTID=NATIONAL&STORYID=APIS7FGQTM0
0

NOVEMBER 01, 15:21 EST 

Fla. Commission Bans Shark Feeding 

By TERRY SPENCER 
Associated Press Writer 

KEY LARGO, Fla. (AP) - A Florida commission Thursday banned shark
feeding expeditions, saying the practice by some scuba boat operators
could be altering the animals' natural behavior. 

The seven-member Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
stressed that there is no evidence connecting the feedings to the recent
shark attacks in the state's waters. 

They said the ban, which takes effect Jan. 1, is solely aimed at
assuring that the sharks do not become more dangerous. 

Opponents of ``interactive diving,'' in which scuba-diving tourists
watch dive leaders feed chunks of fish to sharks, say the practice
teaches the animals to associate people with food. 

Shark dives bring thousands of tourists and millions of dollars to the
state. 

Scuba boat operators and divers who oppose the ban argued that the
practice does not a pose a danger to the public. They have sued to
overturn the ban. 

``There is no scientific evidence to support the ban,'' said Erich
Ritter, a scientist at the Shark Research Institute in Princeton, N.J. 

John Stewart, a spokesman for the Diving Equipment and Marketing
Association, said if shark feedings posed a danger to the public, a
diver would have been attacked on one of the tours. There have been no
such attacks. 

``Wouldn't the shark go after the person who is two feet away?'' Stewart
said. 

Since 1994, the number of Florida shark attacks has exceeded 20 in every
year except 1996, according to the International Shark Attack File. The
number peaked in 2000, when there were 38, including one death. There
have been 36 so far this year. 

The increase in attacks since 1994 is due in part to the enhanced
ability to report the attacks, said the organization's director, George
Burgess. 

In July a bull shark ripped the arm off 9-year-old Jessie Arbogast as he
swam near Pensacola. Surgeons reattached his arm, but severe blood loss
left the Mississippi boy brain-damaged. 

--- 

On the Net: 

Shark Attack File:
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/sharks/statistics/statistics.htm 

Fish and Wildlife Commission: http://www.floridaconservation.org
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