Shark attacks and kills Pennsylvania woman snorkeling in the Bahamas, officials say

Shark attacks, kills Pennsylvania woman snorkeling in Bahamas – KIRO 7 News  Seattle

Shark attacks and kills Pennsylvania woman snorkeling in the Bahamas, officials say

 

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A shark attacked and killed a U.S. cruise ship passenger who was snorkeling in waters around the Bahamas on Tuesday, according to authorities.

The incident involved a 58-year-old woman from Pennsylvania and occurred at a popular snorkeling spot near Green Cay in the northern Bahamas, police spokeswoman Chief Superintendent Chrislyn Skippings told The Associated Press.

“It’s unfortunate,” she said.

Skippings said the woman’s family identified it as a bull shark.

Regal Caribbean International said in a proclamation to the AP that the individual kicked the bucket in the wake of showing up at a nearby clinic for treatment and that the organization is helping their friends and family. They said the visitor was partaking in a free shore outing in Nassau and had been cruising on Harmony of the Seas, which is on a seven-night trip in the wake of leaving Florida on Sunday.

The majority of shark attacks in the Caribbean have occurred in the Bahamas, with two reported in 2019, one of them fatal. That incident involved a Southern California woman who was on vacation and was attacked by three sharks near Rose Island, located just a half mile from where Tuesday’s attack occurred.

In December 2020, a fatal shark attack was reported in the French Caribbean territory of St. Martin, the first such incident in that region.

Overall, at least 32 shark attacks have been reported in the Bahamas since 1749, followed by 13 attacks in Cuba during that time period, including one in 2019, according to the Florida-based International Shark Attack File.

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Pennsylvania woman, 58, killed in a bull shark attack while snorkeling in  the Bahamas

Michael Heithaus, a marine biologist at Florida International University in Miami, said in a phone interview that the high number of attacks in the Bahamas is likely linked to the fact that there are a lot of people in the water in that area and that it has a robust marine ecosystem.

He said the Bahamas has an assortment of shark animal varieties, most of which don’t focus on individuals, with the exception of bull sharks and tiger sharks.

“They get to very large sizes, and they eat big prey,” Heithaus said, adding that sharks have incredible sensory systems and can be attracted to food, sounds and smells in the water.

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But overall, shark attacks remain rare, he stressed.

Worldwide, there were 137 shark attacks last year, 73 of them unprovoked, according to the International Shark Attack File.

 

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