Shark-attack prevention going high-tech with drones, app

Leslie Reynolds, chief ranger at Cape Cod National Seashore, displays a shark-alert flag last week at the National Park Service’s offices in Wellfleet, Mass.
Leslie Reynolds, chief ranger at Cape Cod National Seashore, displays a shark-alert flag last week at the National Park Service’s offices in Wellfleet, Mass.

CHATHAM, Mass. -- A growing great white shark population along the East Coast has officials and researchers turning to responses both high- and low-tech to ensure safety for millions of beachgoers this summer.

On Cape Cod, Mass., warning flags and signs are cropping up at some of the coastline's most popular beaches, and a local shark research nonprofit is developing a shark-tracking app for the entire Eastern Seaboard.

Researchers at Duke University and the University of North Carolina, meanwhile, are testing shark-seeking drones in a scientific study that may one day give beach lifeguards a new eye in the sky.

"The days of burying our heads in the sand and saying, 'What sharks? We don't have sharks here' are over," said Gregory Skomal, a Massachusetts state biologist who has been studying Cape Cod's surging white shark population. "It's time to move past that and be forthright and honest with the public about the presence of these animals."

The new measures are the latest acknowledgements of the reality taking hold on Massachusetts' famous coastline, where Skomal's team identified 141 different great whites last year, up from about 80 the previous year.

The region, like others along the East Coast, has dozens of other species of sharks including blue and mako sharks, but many tend to stay farther offshore and be less aggressive than great whites, Skomal said.

The great whites are being drawn to Cape Cod's waters because seals, their preferred food, have dramatically rebounded there, thanks to a 1972 law that made it illegal to kill them.

Researchers, beach managers and public safety officials have convened in recent years an unofficial "shark working group" to come up with ways to educate the public. Among the ideas they developed for this summer were the warning flags, which are purple and emblazoned with the unmistakable silhouette of a great white.

The flags were to start flying at some town beaches over the weekend and appear on beaches administered by the National Park Service starting June 16, when lifeguards will begin to patrol those beaches.

Towns are also posting billboards at beach entries. Many bear a large image of a great white and advise visitors against swimming near seals.

"It's certainly not to sensationalize the situation. You just really need to jam it down their throats," said Nathan Sears, natural resources manager for the Cape Cod town of Orleans. "Whatever you can give them -- pamphlets, signs, flags."

By July, when Cape Cod's waters warm and great whites begin to appear in earnest, those measures will get high-tech reinforcement.

A smartphone app being released by the Chatham-based Atlantic Great White Conservancy will let beachgoers from Canada to Florida monitor the movements of tagged great whites and report their own possible shark sightings.

That comes as North Carolina researchers study whether drones can effectively track sharks on the East Coast, as communities in California and Australia already do. They've been testing the technology on decoys so far, but they expect to begin tracking real sharks in the coming week.

The challenge is that the waters off the East Coast are murky. Mounting infrared cameras on the drones may be a solution, the researchers said.

"We are trying to find out at what range and what depths and under what conditions we are going to be able to use this technology," said Dave Johnston at Duke's Marine Lab in Beaufort, N.C. "There will be conditions where it's just not going to work."

While the measures provide a degree of security, researchers stress there's little chance that beachgoers will become shark bait anyway.

Worldwide, there were 98 unprovoked shark attacks in 2015, resulting in six deaths.

Of those, 59 were in the United States, including 30 in Florida and 16 in the Carolinas, according to the International Shark Attack File maintained at the Florida Museum of Natural History.

Longtime Massachusetts residents welcome this year's new measures, but some hope officials soon turn their attention to what they see as a more pressing issue: controlling the seal population that's drawing the sharks in the first place.

"Even if they don't reduce the quantity of seals, they can at least figure out a way to scare them away from certain areas," said Justin Labdon, a shop owner who created Chatham Whites, a clothing line inspired by the town's latest attraction. "There really shouldn't be huge seal colonies on the beach where people are swimming with their kids and making a bull's-eye for great whites."

A Section on 05/31/2016

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