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Midnight Mike
2007-09-02, 11:03 AM
Sep 2, 2007 10:20 am US/Eastern

NYC Beachgoers Avoid Water After Shark Sighting

(CBS) QUEENS A beautiful Saturday in the sun took a terrifying turn after a six-foot shark surfaced on the sands of Rockaway Beach in Queens.

Lifeguards were ordered to call beachgoers out of the water and evacuated a portion of the beach after the rare discovery was made.

"A tornado hit Brooklyn, there's floods in Queens, and now all of a sudden there's sharks in Rockaway. It's very odd," said beachgoer Dot Di Lorenzo.

Di Lorenzo was able to capture on camera the shark swimming around with its fin emerging from the water. Her son, Keith, is a shark enthusiast and knew exactly what kind it was.

"You could see the tail and dorsal fin tail was the biggest part obviously, and I'd say it's a thresher," he said.

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CBS 2 obtained some incredible photos of the shark after it beached for while. Hans Walters, the Animal Department Supervisor at the New York Aquarium confirmed the shark was in fact a thresher. "The shark made repeated attempts to swim into shore which isn't normal. Sharks don't do that," Walters said.

The shark's behavior indicates it was likely sick.

Thresher sharks typically prefer the deep waters of the ocean, but are occasionally found in shallow areas. They aren't known to attack humans and feed on smaller fish and crustaceans, though their extremely long tails can cause injury to people when swiped hard enough.

Thresher sharks sometimes move into shallow waters when following schools of fish there.

Despite the fact the sharks aren't known to attack humans, the beach was evacuated anyway.

"The Parks Department was responsible and pulled everybody out of the water. The folks who were comfortable doing so put the animal back the water, and did their best to make sure they were okay. It's a nice story," Walters said.

But with the shark back in the water and still in the area lifeguards took no chances and evacuated the beach from 107th to 121st streets.

Police were out on force on the boardwalk warning beachgoers about the shark as they arrived, telling them to stick to the sand. Witnesses weren't disappointed by the evacuation.

"When something like a shark happens, you sit and wait," said Williamsburg resident John Sanchez.

Marine life officials say sharks are rarely reported in the city's waters, but it's not completely unrealistic that make a home here. "It's a reality of marine life in New York. There are sharks in our waters, but the sharks you find in our waters -- none of them consider people part of the food chain," Walters said.

A parks department spokesman told us sharks are not native to New York waters, but they are here because they get caught up in the nets of fishing vessels and then get released near our shores.

http://wcbstv.com/topstories/local_story_244173615.html

Matt Molnar
2007-09-02, 06:26 PM
This happens every couple years. Media makes a big deal out of it but I've never heard of anyone being bitten.

hiss srq
2007-09-02, 06:35 PM
Actually a few years ago in Atlantic Beach someone was bitten if I am not mistaken. Thereh ave also been a few along the Jersey shore.

Idlewild
2007-09-16, 07:16 AM
I don't understand how the Park's department can make a statement like that. NYC would be the only place in the world where sharks aren't native. We certainly have dogfish, tons actually, the only reason I can think of why there isn't a presence of bigger sharks is because of the pollution. As tough as sharks are from what I understand dirty water will kill them.

T-Bird76
2007-09-16, 04:24 PM
Ok newsflash that big body of water just south of us...its the Atlantic ocean...there just might be a few sharks lurking about in those waters.

A few years ago I was at the beach and some dude was surf casting and dragged in a 3 foot Mako Shark, everyone got out of the water for about 5 mins to look at in and then went back in.

NYCMedic
2007-09-17, 12:43 AM
Jamaica Bay has Dusky, Brown, and Sandbar Sharks. I know in 1993 someone caught a 150+ pound Brown Shark near the spring creek landfill.