Suspected shark attacks in Florida,
California over holiday weekend
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[May 31, 2016]
By Barbara Goldberg
(Reuters) - Two people were injured in
suspected shark attacks in Florida and California over the U.S. Memorial
Day holiday weekend, but beachgoers returned to nearby ocean waters on
Monday, officials said.
On Sunday, a 13-year-old boy was bitten on the right leg in
Neptune, Florida, east of Jacksonville, and a woman in Newport
Beach, California, was bitten on her torso and arms, according to
police and local media reports.
"Even though we can't confirm it was a shark attack, we're treating
it as a shark attack," Newport Beach Fire Department Lifeguard
Battalion Chief Michael Halphide said of the California attack.
"I don't think there's a whole lot of doubt that these will be
considered unprovoked shark attacks," said George Burgess, a shark
expert at the University of Florida. "These are entirely predictable
things just as you can predict drownings or car accidents as a
result of this being a huge holiday weekend."
Officials closed a 5-mile (8-km) stretch of beach in Newport Beach
on Sunday but reopened a 2-mile (3-km) piece on Monday as lifeguard
patrol boats and police helicopters searched for sharks, Halphide
said. If any are is found, they will be observed but not caught or
killed, he said.
Still closed on Monday was Corona del Mar State Beach, located in
Newport Beach, where the incident occurred, as well as some adjacent
coastline.
"We expect good crowds, probably more than 75,000 people this
holiday," Halphide said.
In Florida, Neptune Beach remained open the day after the
13-year-old was attacked just before 3 p.m. by what was described as
a 5-foot shark, police said.
Cell phone video on NBC's "Today" program showed blood spattered
sand as the boy was treated by rescuers.
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A surfer carries his board into the water next to a sign declaring a
shark sighting on Sydney's Manly Beach, Australia, November 24,
2015. REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo
Shark attacks in 2016 were expected to reach an all-time high,
according to Burgess, director of the International Shark Attack
File at the university.
The Memorial Day holiday weekend signals the unofficial start of the
U.S. summer vacation and beach season.
There were a record with 98 shark attacks worldwide last year,
including 59 in the United States. Six were fatal worldwide,
including one U.S. fatality in Hawaii. Of the U.S. attacks, 51
percent took place in Florida, according to the university's
website.
The increase, Burgess said, is due to shark populations slowly
recovering from historic lows in the 1990s, the world's growing
human population and rising temperatures that lead more people to go
swimming.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Editing by Jeffrey
Benkoe)
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