Catherine Macdonald will never forget the first time she saw a shark. She was about 8 years old and at a beach in South Carolina. A fisherman had caught a small bonnethead shark and brought it onto shore. The adults on the beach seemed worried.
“I’m looking at this sad little shark, gasping for air,” recalls Macdonald. She’s now a shark scientist at the University of Miami in Florida. “And I thought, I don’t think that we’re the ones in danger here.”
Bonnetheads, like most types of sharks, are no threat to humans. Still, they often have a reputation as man-eaters. In reality, sharks have more to fear from us than we do from them.
Catherine Macdonald will never forget the first time she saw a shark. She was about 8 years old. She was at a beach in South Carolina. A fisherman had caught a small bonnethead shark. It was brought onto shore. The adults on the beach seemed worried.
“I’m looking at this sad little shark, gasping for air,” recalls Macdonald. She’s now a shark scientist at the University of Miami in Florida. “And I thought, I don’t think that we’re the ones in danger here.”
Bonnetheads are like most types of sharks. They are no threat to humans. Still, they often have a reputation as man-eaters. In reality, sharks have more to fear from us than we do from them.