Snorkeler injured in suspected shark attack off English coast: "Very scary incident"
A snorkeler off the coast of southern England has suffered a suspected shark bite, officials said on Tuesday, in what appears to be an extremely rare incident.
The Maritime and Coastguard Agency said it sent a rescue team to Penzance in Cornwall "to meet a snorkeler who suffered a suspected shark bite" after the accident was reported last Thursday. Local media reported the snorkeler was a woman.
"It is believed the swimmer suffered a leg injury," the coastguard service said, adding that the snorkeler had been treated by the ambulance service.
A Cornish tour agency that arranges snorkel trips to watch blue sharks confirmed a participant had received first aid after an "incident."
Blue sharks, which grow to nearly 13 feet long, are summer visitors to U.K. waters. They are hunters, which migrate through oceans, eating fish and shellfish.
The blue shark is classed as "near threatened" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature because it is hunted for its flesh and fins and also gets caught accidentally in fishing nets.
Blue Shark Snorkel Trips, based in Penzance, wrote on Facebook, "We have had an incident."
"First aid (was) carried out on the person involved."
"Following advice and assessment from the coastguard, the person walked off the boat and received further treatment ashore," it added.
The person injured was not named, but the company quoted them as saying it was a "very scary incident." However, the person added, "I don't for a second want this freak event to tarnish the reputation of an already persecuted species."
"These occurrences are extremely rare," the company said.
It takes snorkelers to swim with blue sharks 10 to 20 miles offshore, according to its website.
It warns that blue sharks are "apex predators" with no natural predators and participants "swim with them knowing there is a risk."
Blue shark attacks on humans are extremely rare, according to the British Sea Fishing website. There are four confirmed cases of fatal blue shark attacks on humans and 25 confirmed non-fatal attacks, the website says.
Shark attacks increased around the world in 2021 following three consecutive years of decline, officials said in January. The U.S. once again reported the most attacks and Florida accounted for nearly 40% of unprovoked bites worldwide.
Researchers with the International Shark Attack File recorded 73 unprovoked incidents last year, compared to 52 bites in 2020, according to the report.