Australian Surfer Killed in Shark Attack

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Australian Surfer Killed in Shark Attack

Sat Jul 10, 8:45 AM ET

SYDNEY (Reuters) - An Australian surfer was attacked and killed by possibly two sharks off the west Australian coast Saturday, said a fisheries official.

The surfer in his late 20s was attacked while surfing a break called "Left-Handers" near one of Australia's most famous big wave surf spots, Margaret River, 124 miles south of Perth in the state of Western Australia.

"The man suffered a large bite to the legs and torso," a Western Australia police spokesman told reporters.

One witness told Australia's Sky News that two teenagers who pulled the victim out of the water said the shark was "as big as a car." The Western Australian Department of Fisheries was investigating whether two sharks could have been involved.

"It looks as though there may have been two animals involved," a fisheries spokeswoman told reporters."

The St. John Ambulance Service at the small fishing village of Gracetown said it was alerted to the mid-afternoon shark attack by a witness standing on the beach.

There had been a number of recent shark sightings along the Margaret River coast but none in the vicinity of the attack.

Left-Handers is a long beach, often deserted, lined with a rocky shelf which is pounded by large ocean swells out of the southern Indian Ocean. The beach has been closed.

The first documented shark attack in Australia occurred in 1791 and there have been 625 shark attacks in the past 200 years, 187 of them fatal, according to the Australian Shark Attack File kept by Sydney's Taronga Zoo.

The last fatal shark attack in Western Australia was in 2000 off Cottesloe Beach in the city of Perth when a Great White attacked a bodysurfer only a few meters off the beach.

Most shark attacks in Australia are off the more populated east coast, but most fatal attacks occur in the cold waters off the south coast, a known breeding ground for Great Whites.

Margaret River surfer Bart Mulder said the attack would not stop him surfing the local breaks.

"We were going to go down to the beach for a surf and a couple of blokes came up and said, 'Don't go down there somebody's been bitten in half by a shark'," Mulder said.

"It's the first shark fatality down in the southwest here. Its hard to say how I feel about it, but it won't stop me surfing," he said.

Despite Australia's reputation for sharks, most shark attacks worldwide occur in North American waters, with 63 percent of attacks (36) in 2003, and of those 31 were in Florida, according to the International Shark File.
 
Terrible tragedy -- :( But, it's part of life -- we all have to learn to live and deal with it. In fact, sharks have been on this earth long before humans ever existed.
Just have to be extra careful and cautious when entering the vast ocean.
 
ouch.. but they stated that only 625 shark attacks in past 200 years.. so its rare.. its like 3 shark attacks per year.
 
Search for killer sharks called off
13:51 AEST Tue Jul 13 2004

A search for two sharks believed responsible for the fatal attack on a surfer south of Perth has been called off.

Long time surfer Brad Smith, 29, died after being set upon by two sharks as he surfed off the popular Left Handers Break near Gracetown, 280km south of Perth, on Saturday.

WA Fisheries spokesman Tony Capalluti said that even if the sharks were now located, there was no possibility of linking them the attack.

"We ended that search last night at dusk. The reason we did that is that there were no sightings and we believe that there was no use in continuing with a dedicated search," Mr Capalluti told ABC radio.

"If in fact there was a decision to take the shark, that would have been a difficult because making that relationship with the attack would have been difficult."

Witnesses have told authorities two sharks were near Mr Smith when he was attacked.

Department of Fisheries shark researcher Rory McAuley said that a great white and a large bronze whaler might have combined to attack Mr Smith.

"We haven't been able to rule out the possibility that more than one species might have been involved in the attack, which, if it's proved, would be a very unusual set of circumstances," Mr McAuley said.

He had never heard of two sharks of different species taking a surfer, he said.

The emergency management committee set up after the attack on Mr Smith, involving police, fisheries officers and local community leaders, will decide whether the beach at Left Handers will be reopened.

An autopsy on Mr Smith's body could be carried out later.

©AAP 2004

Shark search update
 
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