July⢠2018 | 71
READERâS DIGEST
Hawaiiâs shores and are a familiar
food for tiger sharks. With wide jaws
andheavyangledteethtigersharks
areabletocrushandslicethrough
anadultturtleâsshellinawaymost
sharks canât. So if more turtles are
sharingthewaterwithmorepeople
more shark bites might be the result.
The relationship between tiger
sharks and sea turtles could have
broadimplicationsforthehealthof
oceanecosystemsaroundtheglobe.
OnaremotepartofAustraliaâs
westerncoastcalledSharkBaya
research team led by Mike Heithaus
of Florida International University
has documented how tiger sharks
prevent sea turtles and dugongs (sea
cows) from overgrazing the sea grass
beds that anchor the ecosystem. Itâs
notjustbyeatingtheanimalsthey
discovered. The presence of the
sharks changes the turtlesâ and du-
gongsâ habits forcing them to graze
more judiciously to lessen their risk.
IntheBahamaswhichdesignated
itswatersasharksanctuaryin2011
themarineecosystemsarerelatively
healthy. But the adjacent western
Atlantichasmuchweakersharkpro-
tections and appears to be sufering
the consequences.
âI do work in Florida and the Baha-
masanditâsnightanddayâsaysNeil
Hammerschlag a marine ecologist
attheUniversityofMiami.âWesee
massive differences in the size and
numbersofthesharks.heyâredoing
wellintheBahamasbutwealmost
never catch them of Florida. heyâre
just80kilometresapartâheadded.
Floridaprohibitedthekillingoftiger
sharksinitswatersin2012butitâs
the only state on the United States'
easternseaboardtohavedoneso.
JAWSISNâT RESPONSIBLEfor
mostofthethreatstigersharksface
- coastal development marine pollu-
tion longline ishing the popularity
ofsharkinsoupâbutitdidcreatea
cultural attitude that has had a long
shelf life. AfterJawspeopledidnât
just become paranoid about sharks;
they became callous even vengeful.
Shark-ishing tournaments sprouted
on the eastern seaboard of the
United States and dozens continue
celebratingthespectacleofâmonster
sharksâ hanging on the docks.
Insummer2015asIwasplanning
mydiveatTigerBeachnewsbroke
that an 360-kilogram tiger shark had
beencaughtofftheSouthCarolina
coast.USA Todaycalled the shark
âmonstrousâanddescribedtheish-
ermen as âbraveâ. When I got home
fromHawaiiIlookedatthestory
again. Seeing the picture of the gut-
ted delated shark I thought about
howitwasoncethesamesizeas
Sophie and those werenât at all the
wordsthatcametomindâforeither
thesharkorthemenwhokilledit.
FROM NATIONAL GEOGRAPHICSERVICES. NATIONALGEOGRAPHIC.COMMAGAZINE (JUNE 2016) © NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE