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Significant Drop In Shark Bites Reported In 2018

The dots on this map represent the locations of unprovoked shark bites in 2018. Fatal attacks are in orange. Florida Museum image by John Denton
The dots on this map represent the locations of unprovoked shark bites in 2018. Fatal attacks are in orange. Florida Museum image by John Denton

University of Florida researchers say far fewer shark bites were reported worldwide last year.

The University of Florida’s International Shark Attack File documents 66 bites in 2018, compared with 88 the previous year. That's 26 percent lower than the five-year average of 84 bites annually.

Florida led the country with 16 unprovoked shark bites, down from 31 in 2017. The shark attack capital of the world, Volusia County, had four bites, compared to nine the year before.

Gavin Naylor of the Florida Museum of Natural History's shark research program says it's unknown whether the drop can be attributed to more people heeding beach safety warnings or to declining shark populations. Naylor cited an apparent shrinking of Florida’s blacktip shark populations – the species most commonly involved in the state’s shark bites – as a possible factor in the drop in attacks.

Naylor said beachgoers need to learn about shark behavior in areas such as Cape Cod, Massachusetts, where great white sharks have followed a rebounding seal population.

With additional reporting from the Associated Press. 

After a brief stint as Morning Edition Producer at The Public’s Radio in in Rhode Island, Talia Blake returned to WMFE, the station that grew her love for public radio. She graduated with a double-major in Broadcast Journalism and Psychology from the University of Central Florida (Go Knights!). While at UCF, she was an intern for WMFE’s public affairs show, Intersection. In her spare time, Talia is an avid foodie and enjoys working out.
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