Monday, June 17, 2024

Shark attacks are rising in Australia. Technology is helping stop them.

Drone footage shows a shark swimming alongside surfers at Birubi Beach, Australia.
(Video: Department of Primary Industries)

From WP by Michael E.Miller

Australia is a nation of beaches.
But a growing incidence of shark attacks is forcing authorities to turn to drones and artificial intelligence to try to keep beachgoers safe.

COFFS HARBOUR, Australia — It was just before noon when Nathaniel Woodcock returned to the beach with fresh batteries for his drone.
It was the height of the Australian summer, and the 21-year-old was spending another day scanning the emerald waters from above.

He spotted something headed toward the swimmers and surfers:
A seven-foot shadow. A great white shark.

Woodcock radioed lifeguards, then activated the warning system, he later recalled, recounting the incident to a reporter.
“Attention, beach users,” the drone blared.
“There is a shark in your area. Please exit the water.”

As swimmers scrambled onto the beach, Woodcock’s eyes were glued to his screen, where he saw the shark following a school of fish to shore.
As a wave broke, the shark suddenly surged toward the beach.
Then, to everyone’s relief, it headed back out to sea.

Woodcock is one of hundreds of drone pilots enlisted in a high-tech push to stem an increase in shark attacks in Australia, a country of 100,000 beaches where most people live near the coast.

But as the number of attacks has grown recently — in Australia and around the world — the nation is moving away from traditional shark-fighting tools like nets and adopting new technologies.

Swimmers at North Bondi Beach, near Sydney, this past January, at the height of the Australian summer. 
(Photos by Matthew Abbott for The Washington Post)
 
A lifeguard keeps watch from the main Bondi Beach tower on Jan.
26 — Australia Day, one of the busiest beach days of the year.

 
Australia now has the world’s largest coastal drone-surveillance operation and is installing nonlethal traps, or drumlines, that alert authorities when a shark takes their bait.
These are enabling authorities to monitor sharks like never before — and have turned Australia into a laboratory for ways to prevent shark attacks.

Drone pilots are just the beginning.
Officials are testing remotely operated and long-distance drones, as well as ways to incorporate artificial intelligence.
But until such technology is widely deployed, many areas remain unmonitored.

Source: Australian Shark Incident Database

Woodcock’s intervention on a beach in Mollymook, three hours south of Sydney, in January at the height of the Australian summer showed the new technology’s lifesaving power.
But it also revealed the gaps that remain: The great white hadn’t been tagged with a tracker, so a listening station couldn’t detect it.
And had the shark appeared a few hours later, Woodcock, the sole drone operator that day, would have been off duty.

There were 10 fatal shark attacks globally last year, and four of them were in Australia, according to the University of Florida’s International Shark Attack File.
Although this was lower than the six deaths in Australian waters in 2020, the trend has been up: There were only one or two fatal shark attacks a year between 2012 and 2018, with none in 2019.

Last year a woman was bitten by a bull shark in Sydney’s harbor — the first attack in the waterway in a decade.
The incident and a deadly attack in Perth’s Swan River a year earlier have stirred fears that warmer waters caused by climate change are making sharks linger in some locations, just as increasing temperatures and populations drive more people to the ocean.


Drone pilot Paolo Cattaneo monitors the water for sharks on Jan.
26 near Tamarama Beach, Australia.
(Video: Matthew Abbott/The Washington Post)


Swimmers at Bondi Beach.
 
An ancient menace

High above the sunbathers and bodybuilders of Bondi Beach sits an Aboriginal rock carving showing what may be humankind’s first recorded shark attack.
British colonists found Sydney harbor “full” of the animals.
And when Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes, visited in 1920, he marveled that “the fact that the water swarms with sharks seems to present no fears to these strong-nerved people.”

Yet, even those strong nerves have occasionally frayed.
When attacks increased in the 1930s because of waste near Sydney’s shore, authorities put nets around popular beaches.

Nearly a century later, the nets are still in place: There were 51 along 150 miles of coastline near Sydney this Australian summer, managed by the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries.

State workers check the nets every few days.
“Target species” — great white, tiger and bull sharks, which cause most of the serious bites — found alive are fitted with acoustic tags and shepherded out to sea.
But most wildlife caught aren’t sharks, let alone dangerous ones, and are already dead by the time they are discovered.



Source: NSW Department of Primary Industries

“Shark nets create an incredible cost on other marine life,” said Duncan Heuer from Saving Norman, a group devoted to Bondi’s critically endangered gray nurse sharks.

But the biggest argument against nets is that they don’t work, he says.
They sit about 13 feet below the surface, end well above the ocean floor and are only 500 feet long.
Nearly half the time that a shark gets caught, it’s already on the shore side of the net, he added.
And 17 percent of unprovoked attacks have happened at netted beaches, according to DPI.

Nets give beachgoers false security, making politicians reluctant to get rid of them, said Chris Pepin-Neff, an expert on the public policy of shark attack prevention.
“It’s smoke and mirrors,” they said.

Lifeguards, in blue, and lifesavers, in red and yellow, work to keep beach visitors safe on Bondi Beach.

 
A swim group gathers shortly after exiting the water at Bondi Beach.

DPI still says nets reduce shark encounters, but its stance has softened.
A recent study whose authors included DPI scientists said it “could not detect differences in the interaction rate” between sharks and humans at netted vs.
non-netted beaches since the early 2000s.
Last year, half the communities with nets voted to remove them.

Ultimately, it’s the state government that will decide.
New South Wales Premier Chris Minns wants to get rid of the nets — with a caveat.
“I’ve got to have confidence that the replacement, the new technologies, are as good,” he said last year.

Samara Bye, a contractor for the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, deploys a SMART drumline off Coffs Harbour, 300 miles north of Sydney.
 
A new strategy

On a muggy morning in late January, that new technology lined the deck of a small fishing boat chugging out of the Coffs Harbour marina, 300 miles north of Sydney.
As dawn streaked the sky, Samara Bye tossed an anchor over the side of the boat.
Then she threw in two buoys attached to a solar-powered, satellite-linked sensor.
Finally, she chucked in a mullet on a six-inch hook.

She was fishing for sharks.

The DPI contractor was setting 15 nonlethal, or “SMART,” drumlines.
(“SMART” stands for “Shark Management Alert in Real Time.”)


“People hear ‘drumline’ and think we’re killing the sharks, but we’re not,” said Paul Butcher, a DPI scientist.
He contrasts the technology to Queensland state’s use of traditional drumlines, which are left overnight, are deadly and have drawn outrage.


The new drumlines were first implemented in New South Wales in 2015, after four shark attacks — one fatal — in as many weeks sparked fear in the normally laid-back surfer communities near Byron Bay, north of Coffs Harbour.
“The feeling was, ‘You’ve got all those shark nets down in Sydney, but what are you doing for us up here,’” recalled Liz Brennan, a communications coordinator for DPI.


Paul Butcher, principal research scientist with the NSW Department of Primary Industries in Australia, tags a great white shark.
(Video: Department of Primary Industries)

The program, which has grown from a few drumlines to 305, helps keep people safe: Sharks tend to avoid for a few months places where they’ve been caught, Butcher said.
But it also helps humans learn about the animals via DNA and tracking data.

The drumlines work with 37 listening buoys, which alert lifeguards and some beachgoers when a tagged shark approaches.

The idea is to eventually replace Sydney’s shark nets with the newer, nonlethal technologies.

“There just has to be a government at some stage that, when they are happy with the research, will swap shark nets out for drumlines and drones,” Butcher said.

Samara Bye throwing a baited drumline overboard.
She repeats this process every 1,000 yards or so along the Coffs Harbour coastline.

DPI scientist Paul Butcher, left, and colleague James Tulloch pick up a drumline after getting a false alert that a shark had taken the bait.

The new tech isn’t perfect.
Sometimes the drumlines have false alarms.
Glare or seagrass can prevent drone pilots from spying sharks, while bad weather can ground some machines.
And drones are only as good as their operators, who must stay alert for hours.

“It’s a lot of coffee,” Paolo Cattaneo, another drone pilot, explained as he scoured the waves at Tamarama, not far from Bondi.
Like the drumlines, the drone program has grown from a small experiment in 2017 to the biggest such operation in the world.
More than 200 paid pilots monitor 50 locations along the state’s coast from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
during four busy school-holiday periods.
There are also has a few hundred year-round volunteers.


Lifesavers circle a shark in October 2019 in the waves at Birubi Beach, Australia.
(Video: Department of Primary Industries)

New South Wales used to use planes, which released red powder if they spotted a shark, said Pepin-Neff.
Then the state switched to helicopters, but they proved expensive and ineffective.

As on the battlefield, drones are proving cheaper and more efficient on the beach.
If Cattaneo spots something, he drops his drone to 50 feet and starts recording.
Shark diagrams on his monitor help him gauge an animal’s size.
If it’s a great white, tiger or bull shark and it gets within about 1,000 feet of the beach, he’ll tell lifeguards to clear the water.
In the six weeks over Christmas, as the Australian summer was in full swing, drone pilots spied 164 sharks.

DPI is experimenting with AI to help drone pilots identify dangerous species.
It is also testing “drones in a box” — stored at beaches and deployed remotely — and long-range drones that can fly for 60 miles.

It’s too soon to say if this will stem rising shark attacks.
But so far, in five years, there hasn’t been a shark-human interaction at a beach protected by either drones or the new drumlines, compared with 19 in a similar period before.

Some warn against putting too much faith in technology, however.
The program costs New South Wales about $14 million a year, more than many places can afford.
And even in the future, if Australian beaches are continually patrolled by drones, it still won’t be possible to prevent every shark attack.

“When you enter wildlife’s domain,” Pepin-Neff said, “you do it at your own risk.”

Paul Butcher and his team of shark researchers make their way through the Coffs Harbour marina at sunrise.

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