Tourists gather around a woman who was attacked by a shark off Thompson Cove Beach in the Turks and Caicos Islands and use their clothes to stem the bleeding.
Tourists gather around a woman who was attacked by a shark off Thompson Cove Beach in the Turks and Caicos Islands and use their clothes to stem the bleeding.
A shark bit the hands off a woman along the shore of a Caribbean beach while she was trying to take a picture with it.
The 55-year-old woman, who is understood to be Canadian, had only strayed a few yards into the water when she was attacked on Friday, February 7.
According to the local authorities she “attempted to engage” with the shark when the 1.83m-long predatory fish struck off Thompson Cove Beach in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
It is understood she had one of her arms amputated below the wrist and the other halfway up her forearm. She has since returned to Canada for further treatment.
The species was not confirmed but local reports suggested it was a bull shark.
It is understood that it had been swimming in the area for around 40 minutes before striking.
“The shark was estimated to be approximately 6ft [1.83m] in length. However, the species is yet to be confirmed. It has been determined that the tourist had attempted to engage with the animal from the shallows in an attempt to take photographs,” the authorities said.
People help the woman after she was attacked by a shark.
Shark attacks rare in Turks and Caicos
Shark attacks are rare in the Turks and Caicos, with only one reported last year.
Nevertheless, authorities in the Caribbean have urged caution.
In the Cayman Islands feeding sharks has been illegal since 2022 because of the risk to swimmers and divers.
“Some people believe feeding sharks is great for business or will increase tips from customers, and some even mistakenly believe that conditioning sharks to take speared lionfish will somehow teach them to hunt lionfish out of reef crevices. But teaching sharks to take food from divers only really endangers both humans and sharks,” the Cayman authorities warned.
It is estimated around 83 people a year are the victims of unprovoked shark attacks.
In some parts of the world shark attacks are on the rise, notably off the coast of southern Australia and the US eastern seaboard.
In July 2020, Julie Dimperio Holowach, 63, of New York City, was killed by a shark while swimming off the coast of Maine.
According to the International Shark Attack File, the increase is due to the number of people entering the water.
“The more sharks and people there are in one place, the greater the chance of them bumping into each other,” said Gavin Naylor, director of the Florida Programme for Shark Research.