Shark Week Looms, But Don’t Panic

Shark Week Looms, But Don’t Panic
massive great white shark

massive great white shark

Sharks elicit outsized fear, even though the risk of a shark bite is infinitesimally small. As a marine biologist and director of the Florida Program for Shark Research, I oversee the International Shark Attack File – a global record of reported shark bites that has been maintained continuously since 1958.

We are careful to emphasize how rare shark bites are: You are 30 times more likely to be struck by lightning than be bitten by a shark. You are more likely to die while taking a selfie, or be bitten by a New Yorker. In anticipation of the anxiety that’s typically generated by the Discovery Channel’s Shark Week programming, here are a few things about sharks that are often overlooked.

A big, diverse family

Not all sharks are the same. Only a dozen or so of the roughly 520 shark species pose any risk to people. Even the three species that account for almost all shark bite fatalities – the white shark (Carcharodon carcharias), tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) and bull shark (Carcharhinus leucas) – are behaviorally and evolutionarily very different from one another.

The tiger shark and bull shark are genetically as different from each other as a dog is from a rabbit. And both of these species are about as different from a white shark as a dog is from a kangaroo. The evolutionary lineages leading to the two groups split 170 million years ago, during the age of dinosaurs and before the origin of birds, and 110 million years before the origin of primates.

White, tiger and bull sharks are distinct species that diverged genetically tens of millions of years ago.
Gavin Naylor, CC BY-ND

Yet many people assume all sharks are alike and equally likely to bite humans. Consider the term “shark attack,” which is scientifically equivalent to “mammal attack.” Nobody would equate dog bites with hamster bites, but this is exactly what we do when it comes to sharks.

So, when a reporter calls me about a fatality caused by a white shark off Cape Cod and asks my advice for beachgoers in North Carolina, it’s essentially like asking, “A man was killed by a dog on Cape Cod. What precautions should people take when dealing with kangaroos in North Carolina?”

Know your species

Understanding local species’ behavior and life habits is one of the best ways to stay safe. For example, almost all shark bites that occur off Cape Cod are by white sharks, which are a large, primarily cold-water species that spend most of their time in isolation feeding on fishes. But they also aggregate near seal colonies that provide a reliable food source at certain times of the year.

Shark bites in the Carolinas are by warm-water species like bull sharks, tiger sharks and blacktips (Carcharhinus limbatus). Each species is associated with particular habitats and dietary preferences.

Blacktips, which we suspect are responsible for most relatively minor bites on humans in the southeastern United States, feed on schooling bait fishes like menhaden. In contrast, bull sharks are equally at home in fresh water and salt water, and are often found near estuaries. Their bites are more severe than those of blacktips, as they are larger, more powerful, bolder and more tenacious. Several fatalities have been ascribed to bull sharks.

Tiger sharks are also large, and are responsible for a significant fraction of fatalities, particularly off the coast of volcanic islands like Hawaii and Reunion. They are tropical animals that often venture into shallow water frequented by swimmers and surfers.

Sharks are important predators that play critical roles in ocean food chains.

Humans are not targets

Sharks do not “hunt” humans. Data from the International Shark Attack File compiled over the past 60 years show a tight association between shark bites and the number of people in the water. In other words, shark bites are a simple function of the probability of encountering a shark.

This underscores the fact that shark bites are almost always cases of mistaken identity. If sharks actively hunted people, there would be many more bites, since humans make very easy targets when they swim in sharks’ natural habitats.

Local conditions can also affect the risk of an attack. Encounters are more likely when sharks venture closer to shore, into areas where people are swimming. They may do this because they are following bait fishes or seals upon which they prey.

This means we can use environmental variables such as temperature, tide or weather conditions to better predict movement of bait fish toward the shoreline, which in turn will predict the presence of sharks. Over the next few years, the Florida Program for Shark Research will work with colleagues at other universities to monitor onshore and offshore movements of tagged sharks and their association with environmental variables so that we can improve our understanding of what conditions bring sharks close to shore.

More to know

There still is much to learn about sharks, especially the 500 or so species that have never been implicated in a bite on humans. One example is the tiny deep sea pocket shark, which has a strange pouch behind its pectoral fins.

Only two specimens of this type of shark have ever been caught – one off the coast of Chile 30 years ago, and another more recently in the Gulf of Mexico. We’re not sure about the function of the pouch, but suspect it stores luminous fluid that is released to distract would-be predators – much as its close relative, the tail light shark, releases luminous fluid from a gland on its underside near its vent.

The goblin shark, found mainly off Asia, can project its jaw forward to pull prey into its mouth.

Sharks range in form from the bizarre goblin shark (Mitsukurina owstoni), most commonly encountered in Japan, to the gentle filter-feeding whale shark (Rhincodon typus). Although whale sharks are the largest fishes in the world, we have yet to locate their nursery grounds, which are likely teeming with thousands of foot-long pups. Some deepwater sharks are primarily known from submersibles, such as the giant sixgill shark, which feeds mainly on carrion but probably also preys on other animals in the deep sea.

Sharks seem familiar to almost all of us, but we know precious little about them. Our current understanding of their biology barely scratches the surface. The little we do know suggests they are profoundly different from other vertebrate animals. They’ve had 400 million years of independent evolution to adapt to their environments, and it’s reasonable to expect they may be hiding more than a few tricks up their gills.

[ Expertise in your inbox. Sign up for The Conversation’s newsletter and get a digest of academic takes on today’s news, every day. ]The Conversation

Gavin Naylor, Director, Florida Program for Shark Research, University of Florida

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The post Shark Week Looms, But Don’t Panic appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Shark Week Looms, But Don’t Panic

Pastor refuses dying man a funeral because his son is gay

Pastor refuses dying man a funeral because his son is gay

A 71-year-old man who is currently lying on his deathbed was told by his local pastor that he couldn’t have his funeral at his childhood church because he produced a gay son.

The son, Jessie Goodman, says his dying father’s last wish is to have his funeral at Lee’s Chapel Baptist Church in Sweetwater, Tennessee, and he wants Jessie to sing the hymn “The Anchor Holds” at the service.

The church holds special meaning his dad because it was his family’s church growing up.

But when Jessie contacted the church to start making arrangements, Pastor Jay Scruggs told him absolutely positively not.

According to local media outlets, Scruggs denied Jessie’s father’s request because Jessie is engaged to another man.

Yes, you read that correctly. Scruggs won’t permit Jessie’s heterosexual father to have his funeral at his church because his son is gay.

“They’re punishing my dad for a lifestyle choice I’ve made,” Jessie tells WTVC. “It’s not me up there in a casket. It’s him.”

Scuggs reportedly told Jessie that “as long as I was going to take part in any way, [my father] could not have his service there.”

So technically, his father could have his funeral at the church, but Jessie couldn’t attend.

According to Jessie, his dying father, who is also a pastor, didn’t take the news well.

“He had a very hurt look on his face when we told him that,” he says.

Church member Daryl Morrow tells local media that he believes Jessie’s father should be allowed to have his funeral at the church and that Jessie should be able to attend; however, he thinks Jessie’s fiancee, Brandon, shouldn’t be allowed inside the venue.

When asked for comment, Scruggs told reporters he wouldn’t talk to them under after Jessie’s father is in his grave.

Jessie’s father is still alive, but the family says he only has “a few days left.”

www.queerty.com/pastor-refuses-dying-man-funeral-son-gay-20190725?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Ricardo Rosselló, Faye Dunaway Fired, Jeffrey Epstein, Tegan & Sara, FaceApp, Bachelor in Paradise: HOT LINKS

Ricardo Rosselló, Faye Dunaway Fired, Jeffrey Epstein, Tegan & Sara, FaceApp, Bachelor in Paradise: HOT LINKS

RICARDO ROSSELLÓ. Puerto Rico’s governor has resigned after days of mass protests following the lead of group chats in which Rossello made misogynistic and homophobic remarks.

BREAKING: It is official. @ricardorossello will resign effective August 2. Protesters light fireworks, erupt in euphoric cheer. Here is the moment they find out their cries, fraught as they are, have been heard. That Ricky has resigned. #rickyrenuncia #PuertoRico pic.twitter.com/y3FYBidOGa

— Nick Brown (@NickPBrown) July 25, 2019

DUN FADEAWAY. Faye Dunaway fired from Broadway’s Tea At Five for slapping crew member. ‘Even though that’s what supposedly got her fired for once and for all, it was allegedly just one layer of the demon cake that Faye force fed everyone with. Sources say that she regularly showed up very late to rehearsals for the play, demanded that nobody wear white in rehearsals because it distracted her, and left rambling, angry voicemails to the creative team in the middle of the night. During one photo shoot, a source says she fed her salad to the floor.’

LIFETIME APPOINTMENTS. Mitch McConnell moves to confirm 19 judges: “McConnell’s move means likely confirmation of 19 District Court judges; the GOP leader had focused on higher-level Circuit Court judges for the first 30 months of Donald Trump’s presidency, filling all but four vacancies on the appeals courts.”

FIRED. Turning Point USA staffer fired over fake presidential seal: “The individual responsible, a member of TPUSA’s AV team, was let go in the wake of the incident. According to a source familiar with the event, the incident was just a terrible Google search mistake. TPUSA had event branding on the screens, but during a run through ahead of Trump’s remarks a few hours before the event, the team was told they had to change the branding to a presidential seal, prompting a search for a high quality image.” BACKGROUND

STIFFED. Mike Pence skipped out on $24,000 bill for local law enforcement after Aspen fundraiser: “We had a SWAT team from Garfield County here that I want to see get reimbursed. We had Carbondale officers here that I want to see get reimbursed. They don’t have this kind of money — I don’t have this kind of money.”

JEFFREY EPSTEIN. Billionaire financier found injured in jail cell – suicide attempt?

MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP. Anti-gay baker Jack Phillips files motion to dismiss latest lawsuit.

MEGAN RAPINOE. She’s got a book deal: “The untitled project, acquired by Penguin Press and expected to be out in fall 2020, will include anecdotes from Ms. Rapinoe’s life, said the Penguin Press president and editor in chief Ann Godoff, who made the deal, but its message will go beyond sports.”

MICHIGAN. Ann Arbor considers ban on gay conversion therapy. “City Attorney Stephen Postema gave an overview of a draft ordinance at a recent Human Rights Commission meeting, noting Huntington Woods recently became the first Michigan city to institute such a ban, making it a civil infraction.”

JOY RIDE OF THE DAY. Kid takes trip through TSA baggage area at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport.

SAINT JOSEPH HIGH SCHOOL. Pete Buttigieg’s high school wouldn’t hire him today because he’s gay.

FACEAPP IS THE FUTURE. And there is little more terrifying than this gif.

BACHELOR IN PARADISE. “Queer queen” Demi Burnett gets backlash on social media after coming out. “This is the first season I WILL NOT watch BIP due to the same sex disgusting behavior on screen. I have nothing against their choice of lifestyle but I don’t like to have it shoved down my throat on TV . you ruined your show for me and 300 others.”

LYRIC VIDEO OF THE DAY. Tegan & Sara

LOVEBIRDS OF THE DAY. Bronze Avery & photographer, JUSSY.

TEASER OF THE DAY. Matt & Dan.

THIRSTY THURSDAY. Justin Russo.

View this post on Instagram

JUNE IS BUSTING OUT ALL OVER! . #thirst #beefcake #beard #scruff @thebeardedhomo @beefcakesmen

A post shared by JUSTIN T. RUSSO (@justintrusso) on

The post Ricardo Rosselló, Faye Dunaway Fired, Jeffrey Epstein, Tegan & Sara, FaceApp, Bachelor in Paradise: HOT LINKS appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Ricardo Rosselló, Faye Dunaway Fired, Jeffrey Epstein, Tegan & Sara, FaceApp, Bachelor in Paradise: HOT LINKS

Janelle Monae to show off her acting chops in the Amazon series ‘Homecoming’

Janelle Monae to show off her acting chops in the Amazon series ‘Homecoming’

Singer-actress and queer firebrand Janelle Monae has announced her next project: she will replace Oscar-winner Julia Roberts in Season 2 of the acclaimed Amazon series Homecoming.

Season 1 of the mystery-thriller series starred Roberts as a woman working for the Homecoming Center, a medical facility designed to help traumatized servicemen return to civilian life. Four years after leaving the facility, she realizes that her memories are somehow blocked, and her reasons for departing are not what they seemed.

Related: Are Lupita Nyong’o and Janelle Monae a couple?!

Season 2 will follow a similar format with Monae’s character. She will play a woman who wakes up in a canoe with no memory of her past. The show will then focus on her unraveling the mystery.

The inking of the deal marks Monae’s first job as a television series regular. Along with earning wide praise for her music, Monae has appeared in films like Moonlight, Hidden Figures and in an episode of the series Black Mirrorand earned praise for her work as an actress.

www.queerty.com/janelle-monae-show-off-acting-chops-amazon-series-homecoming-20190725?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29