| Literature DB >> 35986014 |
James P Tucker1, Isaac R Santos2,3, Brendan P Kelaher2, Marcel Green4, Graeme F Clark5, Paul A Butcher2,6.
Abstract
The perceived and real threat of shark bites have significant direct health and indirect economic impacts. Here we assess the changing odds of surviving an unprovoked shark bite using 200 years of Australian records. Bite survivability rates for bull (Carcharhinus leucas), tiger (Galeocerdo cuvier) and white (Carcharodon carcharias) sharks were assessed relative to environmental and anthropogenic factors. Survivability of unprovoked bull, tiger and white shark bites were 62, 75 and 53% respectively. Bull shark survivability increased over time between 1807 and 2018. Survivability decreased for both tiger and white sharks when the person was doing an in water activity, such as swimming or diving. Not unsurprisingly, a watercraft for protection/floatation increased survivability to 92% from 30%, and 88% from 45%, for tiger and white sharks respectively. We speculate that survival may be related to time between injury and treatment, indicating the importance of rapid and appropriate medical care. Understanding the predictors of unprovoked bites, as well as survivability (year and water activity), may be useful for developing strategies that reduce the number of serious or fatal human-shark interactions without impacting sharks and other marine wildlife.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35986014 PMCID: PMC9391475 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-16950-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Annual frequency of recorded unprovoked shark bites and fatalities in Australia 1790–2018.
Figure 2Location of Australian shark bites 1790–2018. Circles represent survived bites, X represents fatalities. Figure created using QGIS v. 3.16.2 (www.qgis.org).
Figure 3Probability of surviving a bull shark bite over time. Time was not a significant predictor for survivability of tiger and white bites. Figure created using R v. 3.5.0 (www.r-project.org).
Figure 4Bites and fatalities across habitats for bull, tiger and white sharks 1791–2018. Figure created using QGIS v. 3.16.2 (www.qgis.org).
Figure 5Percentage of injury locations (on human body) (a) across shark species, (b) across water activity type. Colours in pie charts match body part colours. Other (green) includes data with no injury recorded.
Figure 6Survivability of shark bites for in water vs on water activities for bull, tiger and white sharks. On water activities include being on any unpowered vessel; surfing, bodyboard, kite board, kite surf, stand up paddle board, canoe, floatation device, kayak, rowboat, surf ski, wake boarding. In water activities include fishing (standing in water), free diving, SCUBA diving, snorkelling, standing/wading, swimming, swimming with unpowered vessel (e.g. clinging to wreckage).