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Study finds regular peaceful coexistence between sharks, humans in Southern California waters

Researchers at California State University's Shark Lab have used drones to study the behavior of juvenile white sharks along the Southern California coastline in relation to human presence in the water.

You're gonna need a bigger ... drone.

That's right, "Jaws" fans. Researchers at California State University, Long Beach-based Shark Lab used drones to study juvenile white sharks along the Southern California coastline and how close they swim to humans in the water.

Turns out, it's pretty close. Almost within the bite radius.

Still, it's safe. There were no reported shark bites in any of the 26 beaches surveyed between January 2019 and March 2021, according to the Shark Lab.

The juvenile white sharks mostly grouped together in two locations — in southern Santa Barbara County and central San Diego County — the researchers discovered through roughly 1,500 drone flights over the two years. Adult white sharks are generally solitary animals.

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In those two spots, the juvenile sharks swam near humans on 97% of the days surveyed, the researchers wrote in a paper published Friday. The sharks often swam within 45.72 meters of the wave breaks — closest to surfers and stand-up paddle boarders.

"Most of the time water users didn’t even know the sharks were there, but we could easily see them from the air," said Patrick Rex, a Cal State Long Beach graduate student who led the study.

The researchers confirmed that surfers, swimmers and sharks can coexist peacefully but "we never expected to see so many encounters every day with no incidents" of bites, said Chris Lowe, a marine biology professor and the Shark Lab's director.

"It’s not just about sharks, it’s about people," Lowe said. "This study may change people’s perception of the risk sharks pose to people that share the ocean with them."

So just keep swimming.

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