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White shark attack shows they're not man-eaters

Shark expert Peter Klimley, a UC Davis researcher, says the recent attack on a swimmer off Avila Pier in Central California supports his belief that adult great white sharks are selective hunters that would rather eat fat seals than bony human beings. Deborah Franzman was swimming at the surface among a group of pinnipeds -- seals or sea lions -- on Aug. 20 when a great white shark, estimated to be 15 to 18 feet long, grabbed her leg. It stripped the flesh from her left thigh, severing the femoral artery. She was briefly pulled below the surface and then released. When lifeguards reached her a few minutes later, she was facedown in the water. Authorities said she had bled to death. From UC Davis:

White shark attack shows they're not man-eaters

Shark expert Peter Klimley, a UC Davis researcher, says the recent attack on a swimmer off Avila Pier in Central California supports his belief that adult great white sharks are selective hunters that would rather eat fat seals than bony human beings.

Deborah Franzman was swimming at the surface among a group of pinnipeds -- seals or sea lions -- on Aug. 20 when a great white shark, estimated to be 15 to 18 feet long, grabbed her leg. It stripped the flesh from her left thigh, severing the femoral artery. She was briefly pulled below the surface and then released. When lifeguards reached her a few minutes later, she was facedown in the water. Authorities said she had bled to death.

"Certainly that shark could have consumed her if it had wanted to. But it hit her, then realized she was not a seal and let her go," Klimley said. "Sharks don't eat humans. Humans are not nutritious enough. They are not worth the effort."

Klimley's 30 years of scientific studies of white, hammerhead, nurse and other shark species' behavior are described in lay language in his entertaining new book, "The Secret Life of Sharks" (Simon & Schuster, $25). "I wrote this book as a public service. It provides knowledge, accurate knowledge, about sharks. If people are interested in this attack, or frightened by it, this book will tell them what happened. You can come to Central California and swim. It's safe. You just don't swim with seals or sea lions or near their colonies."

Klimley's studies of the great white (Carcharadon carcharias) include bite-by-bite analyses of 350 written eyewitness accounts of attacks on pinnipeds and 131 videotaped attacks. He has tracked them (including five adults for one month at a seal colony), made numerous discoveries about their hunting and feeding behaviors (they feed rarely, yet can live 45 days on a single bite, and they warn away food competitors by slapping their tails) and measured their stomach temperatures (unusually warm for a fish at 75 degrees F.).

It's the maintenance of that high core temperature that makes him think great whites need the energy contained in seal fat and don't intend to kill humans. "The fat in seals' outer coats makes up half their body weight and has twice the calories of muscle. Seals and sea lions, not people, are Power Bars for the white shark."




Submitted by BJS on Fri, 2003-08-29 17:29.

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a shark attack in san diego?

Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2008-05-18 18:28.

the headline should really read: "shark looking for dinner mistakes swimmer for sea lion" it's not a shark attack. how about just staying out of the shark's territory? a shark doesn't come up on land looking for people to attack. now that would be a shark attack.

  • reply

shark fins are for losers

Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2008-05-18 18:19.

what a creepy thing to say. do you understand what pain a shark goes through when it has it's fins cut off and then tossed back alive into the ocean? it basically sinks to the bottom and slowly dies. it's one of the cruelest things anyone can ever witness. i saw it happen once and still cannot get the image out of my mind. if i could have jumped and saved it i would have.

  • reply

My point of view:

Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 2008-05-12 08:15.

sharks fin ..are better that viagra!

  • reply

A shark attack in San Diego

Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 2008-04-25 09:13.

A shark just killed a thriathlon swimmer in San Diego... http://www.earthrated.com/blog/2008/04/solana-beach-shark-attack/

  • reply

Not man eaters!

Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2007-10-07 14:32.

Sharks Have no intention of eating humans. It is a simple mistake. It is very rare for a shark to keep biting even if it knows we aren't food. We come into their teritory,so they have every right to ''check us out''! GEEz Peaple! HELP THE SHARKS!

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yes

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2007-05-08 18:49.

i agree.

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sharks are good

Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 2007-03-31 02:38.
sharks have never been man eaters they mistake surfers for their food. ITS NOT THEIR PROBLEM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! who ever came up with jaws has now scared the entire planet about sharks! we are the one to blame because we should not swim or surf were there could posebly sharks near by please reply if you agree with me...................... :)
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thats what im talking about!

Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 2007-03-01 08:07.

that is exactly what im saying! people just dont want to believe us. they arent man-eaters and they never were. nobody was scared of them until some freak came up with the movie Jaws. theres no reason to be scared of them. they are just like any other animal on the planet and im glad that somebody finally agrees

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