The Sublime Otherness of Sharks
A new book makes the visual case for why sharks fascinate and frighten us, and for why we should save them.
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A white shark follows a researcher in a sea kayak off South Africa’s southwest coast. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
Despite our fears, sharks are among the most negligible threats to human life. As the dust jacket of the award-winning National Geographic contributing photographer Thomas P. Peschak's new book, Sharks & People: Exploring Our Relationship With the Most Feared Fish in the Sea, points out, fewer than a half dozen humans are killed each year by sharks, while we have been slaughtering 38 million of them annually.
But sharks are radically different from the other animals that occasionally prey on us. In the fiercest lions, tigers, and leopards we can recognize the kin of beloved house cats, in wolf packs the wild ancestors of dogs. (The Orthodox Christian monks of New Skete have even developed a controversial dog training technique, the alpha roll, based on supposed wolf pack leader dominance tactics.) Grizzly bears can sometimes seem deceptively human until it's too late, as the filmmaker Werner Herzog documented in Grizzly Man. And the young of all these mammalian species can be playful companions to humans until the animals reach adolescence.
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A blacktip shark gapes and displays 15 rows of teeth designed to aid its predation on schools of small fish. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
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A bronze whaler charges a bait-ball of sardines off South Africa’s east coast. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
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In
remote locations like Aldabra Atoll, sharks are abundant. They
congregate in schools of 100 and can be encountered in water that is
often only a few inches deep. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
In contrast, baby sharks might be called pups, but they don't act cute. Some of them even start cannibalizing each other as embryos.
A set of shark teeth are among the most fearsome objects in nature, and
also among the finest of biological designs; Native Americans were
trading tiger and bull shark teeth as tools two millennia ago. While it
is hard to feel empathy with such a mighty organism, it's impossible to
avoid awe—and respect for its athleticism, its superb senses, and its
ability to survive centuries of commercial human predation.Thomas Peschak makes an eloquent visual case for the sublimity of sharks—and also for their conservation. He notes that the media still devotes far more attention to rare shark attacks than to the urgent need to protect them from human depredation, especially the shark fin trade. He might have noted that Peter Benchley, who became wealthy through the 1970s novel and film Jaws, regretted the fear he had sown and became a shark advocate. In the long run, though, China's removal of Mao Tse-Tung's ban on shark fin soup as bourgeois decadence in 1987 may have resulted in more shark slaughter than all the horror books, films, and news items together. Great conservation photography like Peschak's, one must hope, will have the power to change attitudes globally.
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Awaiting
auction, a single boat's catch of silky sharks is laid out in an
orderly grid. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
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Shark fins are laid out to dry in the sun before being packed and shipped to buyers. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
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A butcher in a Sri Lankan fish market deftly severs the dorsal fin of a bull shark. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
We might never love sharks, we may fear them rationally, but above all we must respect them. They are sublime.
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Whale shark. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
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A bronze whaler charges a bait-ball of sardines off South Africa’s east coast. (Thomas Peschak / University of Chicago Press)
The animal hospital in Chicago has some pamphlets about this in their lobby. It really is an awful thing that's happening.
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