Group votes to ban shark feeding dives
Amelia Island, Fla. – A state commission Thursday moved to ban shark
feeding scuba dives in Florida after two deadly shark attacks along the
East Coast over the Labor Day weekend. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission voted 7-1 to put an end to “interactive” dives, in which scuba-diving
tourists watch as tour operators attract sharks and feed them fish.
Several commissioners expressed fear that sharks could be conditioned
to associate humans with food. Tour operators told the commission that
the dives are safe and that no tourists have ever been bitten. The ban
will not take affect until after another public hearing in November, but
there appeared to be little chance the vote would be changed.
There have been more than 40 shark attacks in U.S. coastal waters this
year, including 29 in Florida. On Saturday in Virginia Beach, a 10 year
old boy was fatally mauled in the surf. Two days later, a shark killed
a man and gravely injured his girlfriend off a North Carolina beach. The
ban also would extend to other marine animals, including manatees, barracudas,
moray eels and manta rays. Federal rules already prohibit the feeding of
dolphins in the wild.