Shark Attack Tracker
In 2025, the United States recorded 28 shark attack bites, with Florida leading at 15 incidents, followed by three each in Hawaii and California, where one was fatal, two in Texas, two in North Carolina, one in New York, and two in South Carolina, according to Tracking Sharks data as of late December. Florida's bites dropped from recent averages, with Volusia County seeing six, or 54 percent of the state's total, while Broward County had two, Lee County two, and Miami-Dade one, as reported by the Florida Museum of Natural History's yearly worldwide summary. Hawaii noted three bites, two provoked and none fatal, showing a slight decrease from averages but typical yearly variation. California's five unprovoked bites included the sole U.S. fatality, alongside one each in New York, North Carolina, Texas, and two in South Carolina. Worldwide, 68 shark attack bites occurred by December 24, including 11 provoked and 11 fatal, per Tracking Sharks. No major global incidents dominated headlines beyond U.S. cases, though Brazil saw a fatal attack on a 13-year-old boy at a popular beach, prompting warnings along Pernambuco's coastlines due to murky waters from rainfall increasing bull shark risks, as covered by CBS News. Recent shark sightings have surged along East Coast beaches, particularly in the Carolinas and Florida, leading to temporary closures and heightened patrols. In North Carolina, drone surveillance spotted large blacktip and spinner sharks feeding near swimmers, prompting red flag warnings and lifeguard whistles at beaches like Wrightsville. South Carolina beaches issued shark advisories after multiple sightings off Charleston County, which historically ranks high for attacks. Texas Gulf waters saw increased tiger shark presence near South Padre Island, correlating with two bites there. Emerging patterns suggest more interactions during dawn and dusk when sharks hunt baitfish schools, often mistaken for prey in turbid water. Bull sharks dominate nearshore East Coast incidents due to their tolerance for freshwater inflows, while great whites appear off California, as in the fatal case near Watsonville. Provoked bites, like five in the U.S., often stem from feeding fish or touching sharks. Public safety measures include Florida's expanded shark-netting pilots in Volusia, drone monitoring in Hawaii, and California's acoustic tagging programs to track great whites. Beaches now feature real-time apps for sightings, with officials urging avoiding schools of fish and wearing reef shoes. These steps aim to reduce encounters without harming shark populations. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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