La Trobe

A shark's eye view: Testing the 'mistaken identity theory' behind shark bites on humans

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-13, 04:53 authored by LA Ryan, DJ Slip, Lucille ChapuisLucille Chapuis, Shaun CollinShaun Collin, E Gennari, JM Hemmi, MJ How, C Huveneers, VM Peddemors, L Tosetto, NS Hart
Shark bites on humans are rare but are sufficiently frequent to generate substantial public concern, which typically leads to measures to reduce their frequency. Unfortunately, we understand little about why sharks bite humans. One theory for bites occurring at the surface, e.g. on surfers, is that of mistaken identity, whereby sharks mistake humans for their typical prey (pinnipeds in the case of white sharks). This study tests the mistaken identity theory by comparing video footage of pinnipeds, humans swimming and humans paddling surfboards, from the perspective of a white shark viewing these objects from below. Videos were processed to reflect how a shark's retina would detect the visual motion and shape cues. Motion cues of humans swimming, humans paddling surfboards and pinnipeds swimming did not differ significantly. The shape of paddled surfboards and human swimmers was also similar to that of pinnipeds with their flippers abducted. The difference in shape between pinnipeds with abducted versus adducted flippers was bigger than between pinnipeds with flippers abducted and surfboards or human swimmers. From the perspective of a white shark, therefore, neither visual motion nor shape cues allow an unequivocal visual distinction between pinnipeds and humans, supporting the mistaken identity theory behind some bites.

Funding

Funding was provided by the Western Australian State Government Applied Research Programme (N.S.H. and S.P.C.), the NSW Shark Management Strategy annual grants programme (N.S.H., L.A.R., C.H., D.J.S.), the Sea World Research and Rescue Foundation (N.S.H. and L.A.R.) and an Australian Research Council Linkage grant no. (LP160100333 to N.S.H., D.J.S., C.H., V.M.P., E.G., S.P.C.).

History

Publication Date

2021-10-01

Journal

Journal of the Royal Society Interface

Volume

18

Issue

183

Article Number

20210533

Pagination

12p.

Publisher

The Royal Society

ISSN

1742-5689

Rights Statement

© 2021 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

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