“We’ve been bullied out of the water by the sharks”: Rise in great white numbers triggers panic on US beaches

With seals being one of the great white sharks’ favoured prey, their abundance attracted the ocean predators

A rise in great white shark sightings is causing panic on beaches on the US east coast, according to reports.

Authorities in Cape Cod have put up warning signs and shut down beaches dozens of times in response to an increasing number of sightings.

Between July and the first week of August, there have been at least 59 beach closures due to shark sightings on Cape Cod and Islands, in southeastern Massachusetts, according to the Boston Globe, with some 42 beach closures occurring in the first week of August alone.

One resident, AJ Salerno, told the Wall Street Journal, said he had considered moving after feeling compelled to ban his teenage son from surfing.

“We’ve been bullied out of the water by the sharks,” he said.

Some authorities have put up warning signs on beaches, reading: “People have been seriously injured and killed by white sharks along this coastline,” while a Massachusetts state researcher who tags great whites said he had his busiest July.

Footage circulated online this week showing a 17ft great white shark swimming around a family’s boat just off Cape Cod Bay.

One day later, the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy (AWSC), a non-profit that raises awareness of great white sharks and runs a project to count the existing population in around Cape Cod, posted a video online showing sea water turning red after a shark attacked a seal.

Great white shark numbers are decreasing, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), which lists the species as “vulnerable”.

But they have flocked to Cape Cod in growing numbers and, according to AWSC, the cape is now the only known place in the northwest Atlantic where white sharks aggregate.

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