UH Manoa researchers share results of study on shark cage diving operations

Negligible impact on public safety, according to paper in Environmental Conservation journal

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Contact:
Carl G. Meyer, (808) 236-7477
Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology at Coconut Island
Posted: Jul 14, 2009

A study by five university researchers—including four from the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa—concludes that existing shark cage diving enterprises in Hawaiʻi have a negligible effect on public safety.

The paper, "Seasonal cycles and long-term trends in abundance and species composition of sharks associated with cage diving ecotourism activities in Hawaiʻi," is authored by Carl G. Meyer, Jonathan J. Dale, Yannis P. Papastamatiou, Nicholas M. Whitney and Kim N. Holland, and has been published in the online section of the Environmental Conservation journal.

Meyer, Dale, Papastamatiou and Holland are researchers with the UH Mānoa Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology at Coconut Island, while Whitney works at the Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Florida.

The scientists collected and analyzed logbook data from two Oʻahu shark cage diving operations from 2004-08 to obtain "useful insights into shark ecology or ecotourism impacts." Those impacts on public safety were deemed to be "negligible," due to factors such as remoteness of the sites, and conditioning stimuli that are specific to the tour operations and different from inshore recreational stimuli.

The study also notes that there has been "no increase in shark attacks on the north coast of Oʻahu since cage diving started."



For more information, visit: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=ENC