February 5, 2010 3:59 PM

Expert: Shark Likely Wanted to Eat Victim

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CBSNews
(AP)  A shark up to 9 feet long likely intended to eat the man it fatally attacked off South Florida, a shark expert said Friday.

Stephen Schafer, 38, was kiteboarding about a quarter-mile offshore in Stuart, 100 miles north of Miami, when he went into the water Wednesday and was surrounded by at least three sharks.

In many cases, a shark attack on a human is simply a case of mistaken identity, a so-called "hit-and-run," when the animal bites a person instead of its intended target, another fish. But that didn't seem to be the case with Schafer.

"I don't think there's any doubt that this was an attempt by a larger-size shark to have a meal," said George Burgess, who oversees the International Shark Attack File at the University of Florida's Museum of Natural History. "This was more than likely a predatory attack."

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Schafer was pulled from the water by lifeguard Daniel Lund, 46, who was himself a shark bite victim about 25 years ago along the same coast, an attack that left him unable to walk for several months.

Lund paddled for about 20 minutes to reach Schafer and pulled him back to shore. He died a short time later at a hospital. An autopsy revealed he lost more than half of his blood.

Dr. Linda O'Neil, an associate medical examiner in Martin County, said Friday that Schafer was bitten twice, most likely by the same animal.

One bite was on his buttocks, leaving visible teeth marks, and the other a severe tear to his right thigh that gouged to the bone. His right hand was also wounded, but that apparently happened when the shark bit his thigh.

"It looks like the shark hit his leg and he put his hand down there and that became part of the same bite," O'Neil said.

The thigh wound, which severed branches of the femoral artery, was fatal.

"That was the more significant wound and would have caused death even without that bite to the buttocks," O'Neil said.

The culprit was likely a bull or a tiger shark, the most likely of the species typically found off South Florida to bite in a predatory attack, Burgess said.

"This one here clearly is an event where the shark knew what it was doing," Burgess said. If Schafer hadn't climbed on his kiteboard and been pulled to shore by Lund, the attack likely would have continued.

It was the first deadly shark attack in Florida in five years. The last was in 2005 off the Panhandle, where a 14-year-old Louisiana girl was attacked while swimming about 100 yards off shore. Burgess said that attack was very similar to Wednesday's attack and was perpetrated by a bull shark.

The International Shark Attack File lists 1,032 documented shark attacks in the U.S. since 1690. Fifty were fatal. Florida leads the world in the number of shark attacks annually.

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On the Web

International Shark Attack File: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Sharks/ISAF/ISAF.htm

AP
Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by Ordflyer February 6, 2010 5:18 AM EST
Daniel Lund is a true hero!

My condolences to the Schafer family.
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by erb0087 February 6, 2010 4:55 AM EST
Considering how many people enter the water to swim or surf, shark attacks are extremely rare.

You're in much greater danger driving to the beach.

Experienced surfers typically take a cheerfully fatalistic attitude about shark attacks. "Hope they're not biting today" is the typical remark.
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by erb0087 February 6, 2010 4:59 AM EST
In all those episodes she spent surfing on TV's "Gidget", Sally Field wasn't attacked by a shark even once.
by autumn2672003 February 5, 2010 11:17 PM EST
Sharks eat meat. It has no knowledge as to whether or not it's eating a human or a seal. I'm not going to complain that a shark was hungry in the ocean where a man decided to frolic and risk the chance of being consumed. It's like saying a guy walking in Africa was wronged by the pride of lioness' that ate him. Hello?! Don't want the risk? Don't go where the danger is.
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by newsterl February 6, 2010 12:09 PM EST
Yup, stay out of the shark's combination food bowl & toilet
by theskeptical1 February 5, 2010 9:33 PM EST
And I certainly hope that Lifeguard Daniel Lund will be recognized for his courage. As a previous shark attack victim he well knew the risk he was taking by paddling into the blood-stained water in an attempt to rescue Steve Shafer, but he went right ahead and did it anyway. It takes a damn brave man to do what he did.

My hat is off to you, Mr. Lund.
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by squeakof2006 February 5, 2010 7:43 PM EST
Really, the shark didn't think it was the pizza delivery guy bringing an anchovy pizza? I'm sorry the man died, but sharks are wild animals and this guy was WAY out in the water, where sharks live (and eat). Humans need to respect the animals that live in the wild. This guy apparently, didn't think about that and has paid dearly for it.
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by displeased February 5, 2010 9:03 PM EST
Your post sounds more like a description of fear, not respect.
by superdem1 February 5, 2010 3:55 PM EST
Why do people think it is so smart and "sporting" to go so far out in the ocean ? The ocean is the same as a jungle, it is a wild world filled with predators and prey. In the wild, every animal is always hungry, unless it has just eaten. People are actually at risk even in the surf at popular beaches. I love the ocean, but I am fully aware that I am placing myself in the predators' line of fire, and I only stay in long enough to cool off and have a little fun, then I'm out of there. Swimming way out is madness.
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by jgg000101 February 5, 2010 3:49 PM EST
the good news is that now everybody can list "shark expert" on their resumes.
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by run2jazz2 February 5, 2010 3:21 PM EST
No the shark wanted to play a game of Uno with him? What do you think the shark wanted to do? See, this is a person who is too smart for this world! Genius!
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by displeased February 5, 2010 8:59 PM EST
If you read the article, you would see that, because many of the shark attacks are a case of mistaken identity, they're usually a "hit and run". They don't stick around and eat.
by parisdakar February 5, 2010 2:55 PM EST
The shark wanted to EAT him? Naa, it gave hime a "bite to the buttocks". The shark was just trying to be friendly.
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