
'Alpha predator' sharks and humans clash on an Israeli beach
HADERA: With its golden sand and blue waters, the beach front in central Israel looks much like any other stretch of Mediterranean coast, but a closer look reveals something unusual peeking through the rippling surf: black shark fins.
The sharks are attracted to this patch of water in Hadera during the cold season because of the warmth generated by the turbines of a nearby power station.
This has provoked an adrenaline-filled coexistence between the increasingly bold ocean predators and the curious, sometimes even careless, humans who come to swim.
Last month, a man who got a little too close was mauled to death as spectators on the beach screamed in terror.
All that was left were his bones, rescuers told AFP.
Now, bathers, authorities, and environmental and shark experts are asking how such an event, never seen before in Israeli waters, happened and what can be done to prevent it in the future.
'Sharks do not harm and never normally attack unless they feel either threatened or if somebody's getting into their territory,' Irene Nurit Cohn, a member of rescue agency Zaka's scuba unit and a seasoned diver, told AFP.
'I've been diving since 1982. I've seen many sharks in my life, it has been thrilling and beautiful to watch sharks... but they're not, and I repeat, they're not dangerous,' she said.
Cohn, who was part of the team that searched for the remains of Barak Tzach, a 45-year-old father of four, added that it was the people visiting the unique site who were 'not behaving as they should.'
'People were touching them and disturbing them,' she said, adding that recent media coverage had drawn even more people to the beach.
'It's dangerous'
Immediately after the deadly attack, the local authority erected metal fences with 'danger' signs and blocked an access road into the adjacent nature reserve with a cement barrier.
Two weeks later, those had been removed, and life at the beach was back to normal.
Friends Einav and Carmel, teenagers from a nearby town, appeared largely undeterred by the recent death. They had come specifically to see the sharks.
'Sharks are my favourite animals and so I really wanted to see them, but we said that we will not go inside (the water) because it's dangerous,' said Carmel.
Matan Ben David, a spear-fishing and diving instructor who said he has continued to enter the water, said swimmers should keep a distance and adhere to the rules of the sea.
'Sharks are part of nature, something we have to respect, we have to respect the ocean, we're just visitors here,' he said, describing how he had witnessed people crowding the sharks and taking photographs.
'Sharks are an incredible animal, very majestic but they're an alpha predator and, at the end of the day, a lot of people do not always follow best practices,' Ben David noted.
Like all unsupervised beaches in Israel, the one where the fatal attack took place was off-limits to swimming -- a ban that is widely flouted.
Human-wildlife conflict
Leigh Livine, a shark researcher who has been monitoring this area for the past four years, said that initially, research showed 'the sharks were staying away from direct conflict with the humans entering the water.'
But 'you have a very, very small space that you see this human-wildlife conflict really coming out at certain times of the year.'
Livine said the sharks were a combination of Dusky and Sandbar sharks and that they were present in the area between November and May.
But with temperatures rising each year due to climate change, 'you have a lot more bodies in the water coming into conflict with the sharks.'
Livine said she was shocked by last month's attack but, with interaction between the sharks and humans increasing, was surprised 'that something hasn't happened sooner.'
'It usually comes down to a conflict of space, either food resources, space resources, and we've been seeing humans harass the sharks, really provoking them,' she said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
3 hours ago
- The Star
Thailand says 'progress made' in Cambodia border dispute talks in Phnom Penh
Thailand's Border Affairs Advisor to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Prasas Prasasvinitchai attends the meeting of the Cambodia-Thailand Joint Boundary Commission (JBC), in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on Saturday June 14, 2025. -- Photo: Agence Kampuchea Press via REUTERS BANGKOK/PHNOM PENH (AFP): Thailand said Saturday talks with neighbour Cambodia had "made progress" in resolving a long-running border dispute that last month devolved into clashes. Troops from the two countries exchanged fire on May 28 in an area known as the Emerald Triangle, where the borders of Cambodia, Thailand and Laos meet, with one Cambodian soldier killed. The Thai and Cambodian armies both said they had acted in self-defence, but agreed to reposition their soldiers to avoid confrontations. Thailand has tightened border controls with Cambodia in recent days, while Cambodia ordered troops on Friday to stay on "full alert". Officials from the two countries had agreed to resolve the spat at a Saturday meeting in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh. Foreign ministry adviser Prasas Prasasvinitchai was leading the Thai delegation, while Lam Chea, minister of state in charge of the Secretariat of Border Affairs, headed the Cambodian contingent. Thailand's foreign ministry on Saturday said the meeting had "made progress in building mutual understanding" between the two countries. Thai foreign ministry spokesman Nikorndej Balankura said in a press conference that "diplomatic dialogue remains the most effective way forward", adding that talks would go into Sunday. The row dates to the drawing of the 800-kilometre (500-mile) frontier, largely done during the French occupation of Indochina. The region has seen sporadic violence since 2008, resulting in at least 28 deaths. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet announced earlier this month that Cambodia would file a complaint with the International Court of Justice (ICJ) over four disputed border areas, including the site of the latest clash. Hun Manet said in a Facebook post Friday that the four areas and the border restrictions would not be discussed at Saturday's talks. "Cambodia awaits Thailand to clarify its official position at (Saturday's) meeting on whether Thailand will join Cambodia in referring the four areas to the ICJ," he said. The ICJ ruled in 2013 that a disputed area next to Preah Vihear temple belonged to Cambodia, but Thailand says it does not accept the ICJ's jurisdiction. - AFP


New Straits Times
10 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Convicted murderer put to death in fourth US execution this week
WASHINGTON: A South Carolina man convicted of a 2005 double murder was put to death by lethal injection on Friday, the fourth execution in the United States this week. Stephen Stanko, 57, was pronounced dead at 6.34pm (2234 GMT) at the state prison in Columbia, the South Carolina Department of Corrections said in a statement. Stanko had a choice between his method of execution – firing squad, electric chair or lethal injection. He chose lethal injection. Stanko was convicted of the 2005 murders of his girlfriend, Laura Ling, 43, and Henry Turner, a 74-year-old friend. He also raped Ling's teenage daughter and slit her throat but she survived and testified against him at trial. In a final statement read by his attorney, Stanko said he was "truly sorry for the pain and loss that I caused. "Sorry is never enough but that does not mean it should not be said." Stanko was the fourth Death Row inmate executed in the United States this week. President Donald Trump is a proponent of capital punishment and called on his first day in office for an expansion of its use "for the vilest crimes." John Hanson, 61, was executed by lethal injection in Oklahoma on Thursday for carjacking and kidnapping Mary Bowles, 77, from a mall in the city of Tulsa and then shooting her to death along with a witness, Jerald Thurman. Hanson had been serving a life sentence for bank robbery in a federal prison in the state of Louisiana but the Trump administration approved his transfer to Oklahoma so he could face the death penalty. Anthony Wainwright, 54, convicted of the 1994 murder of Carmen Gayheart, 23, a nursing student and mother of two young children, was put to death by lethal injection in Florida on Tuesday. Gregory Hunt, 65, convicted of the 1988 rape and murder of his girlfriend, Karen Lane, 32, was executed by nitrogen gas in Alabama that same day. There have been 23 executions in the United States this year: 18 by lethal injection, two by firing squad and three by nitrogen hypoxia, which involves pumping nitrogen gas into a facemask, causing the prisoner to suffocate. The use of nitrogen gas as an execution method has been denounced by UN experts as cruel and inhumane. The death penalty has been abolished in 23 of the 50 US states, while three others – California, Oregon and Pennsylvania – have moratoriums in place.--AFP


New Straits Times
11 hours ago
- New Straits Times
India plane crash death toll rises to 279
AHMEDABAD: An Indian police source said Saturday that 279 bodies had been recovered from the site where a passenger jet crashed into a residential district of the city of Ahmedabad. The revised toll from a senior officer in the city, who requested anonymity in order to speak to the media, raises an earlier figure of 265. The official casualty number will not be finalised until the slow process of DNA identification is completed. --AFP