US: Shark patrols ramped up in NY's Long Island after 5 people bitten in 2 days
Jul 06, 2023
New York [US], July 6 : Shark patrols were ramped up off Long Island beaches after five people were bitten in two days by marine animals, say authorities, CNN reported.
Officials in Long Island's eastern Suffolk County, where three of the attacks occurred, have increased beach patrols and are using drones to scour the water for potential threats, the Suffolk County Police Department said on Tuesday.
As per CNN, the spree of bites has left New York beachgoers on high alert and recalls a similar spate of non-fatal shark attacks last summer that triggered several beach closures.
A school of approximately 50 sharks was spotted by a drone near Robert Moses Beach on Tuesday morning, the same day a 15-year-old girl was bitten while swimming at that beach, according to George Gorman, the Long Island Regional Director for New York State Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.
Gorman said that though no sharks were seen by the girl or anyone nearby at the time of the incident, the bite was most likely from a shark.
Also on Tuesday, a 15-year-old boy was bitten on his foot by a shark while surfing off Fire Island's Kismet Beach, Suffolk police said.
Both teens had non-life-threatening injuries, authorities said.
The Quogue Village Police Department said, three more people were bitten on Tuesday, including a 47-year-old man swimming in chest-deep water off of Long Island's Quogue Village Beach, local police said. The bite left him with lacerations on his knee and was from a "larger marine animal" preliminarily believed to be a shark.
The two others who were bitten, a 49-year-old man at Pines Beach and a woman west of Cherry Grove, both sustained non-life-threatening injuries, the police said.
The police department has encouraged people to continue to enjoy the beach but urged swimmers to be vigilant and look out for sharks or pods of fish that may attract predators.
New York's Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation has also increased its water surveillance over the past year, Gorman said.