Ethology study reveals how human shark feeding alters natural behavior. April Israel coastal fatal attack analysis exposes uncontrolled tourism/unregulated marine risks.

Hidden Dangers of Shark Feeding
“Begging behavior”: sharks approach humans expecting food after repeated scraps/bait. Hadera (north Tel Aviv) locals/tourists fed dusky sharks near Orot Rabin power plant’s warm waters.
Artificial feeding disrupts ecology: sharks link humans=food, lose caution, approach insistently. Alters diet/migration, heightens attacks. Diver death shows recreational curiosity + altered habits = fatal.
Hadera Attack: Human Error Chain
At least two dusky sharks (typically non-aggressive) attacked 40yo diver filming sharks with GoPro ~100m offshore. GoPro’s electromagnetic signal possibly mistaken for prey—initial bite wounded, blood drew frenzy.
Chain reaction: blood scent triggered feeding competition overriding caution. Human presence/feeding distorted natural patterns—not innate aggression, but irresponsibility.

Visual proof: photo sequences (video stills) show dorsal fin/tail—first shark preying (dark/blue circles A/B), second joining (light/yellow C/D) (FOEJ 2025).
Responsible Ecotourism: Protect Sharks/People
Kristian Parton (U. Exeter marine biologist): regulated feeding boosts ecotourism/local economies/shark perception. Uncontrolled? Educational turns tragic.
Prevent: total ban on artificial shark feeding/spearfishing in viewing zones. Hadera model: environmental education/science monitoring/conscious tourism.
Hadera tragedy human-hand imbalance, not shark ferocity. Ethology reminds: marine fascination demands responsibility. Limitless interference turns peaceful oceans tragic.
Referencia:
- When Competition Breaks the Rules: Feeding Frenzy as a Trigger for Unexpected Fatal Shark Predation Bites on a Human Sea-User by Non Traumatogenic Carcharinids in the Oriental Mediterranean. Link.
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