
The shark fin—native to its ocean habitat and symbol of horror films.
© DigitalStorm/Thinkstock
Creative Thinkers Invent Shark Repellent
Ahhhh. A beach vacation with adventure—
Catching a wave in Australia
Diving in Hawaii’s coral reef
Kayaking the coast of California
You won’t be alone . . . dunah . . . dunah. That’s right, there will be other tourists there too! And of course, marine life, possibly sharks.
Surfers, who decide to play in the playground of a predator, are used to taking a ration of fear along for the ride. But now ocean enthusiasts and other creative thinkers have teamed up to develop a shark repellent that relaxes the mind and eliminates the fear for surfers.
And it just might provide an answer for coexisting with sharks, who are essential animals in the ocean environment.

Beach tourism is no longer two chairs on an empty beach.
© BlackEyedDog/Thinkstock
Too Much Fun In the Sun?
Why are shark attacks on the increase? The number of people in coastal waters has skyrocketed. For example, Toronga Conservation Society of Australia reports this population increase for Australia:
- 1900 = 3.7 million
- 1950 = 8.3 million
- 1990 = 17 million
- 2011 = 22.7 million
- 2014 = 23.5 million
Of course, more people going into the water will result in a higher chance for contact with marine life, including sharks.

Where there is an ocean to play in, there are surfers ready to play.
© Anthony Ong
The recent rise in shark attacks has set in motion reactions from governments, organizations, scientists, surfers, and other ocean enthusiasts.
The goal: reinstate a relaxed vibe by protecting ocean goers. Meeting this goal can manifest itself in government plans for shark culling—the trapping and killing of sharks—or lenient policies on hunting sharks for their fins. Even as shark numbers are decreasing, 100 million are being killed annually for shark fin soup in Asia.
But, what about the sharks?
Step into the Fins of a Shark
Sharks get a bad rap for simply surviving in their habitat.
Consider Hollywood horror movies like Jaws, Jaws 2, Cruel Jaws, and Jurassic Shark. In my opinion, they are due for a required disclaimer:
Beware! Side effects may include an irrational fear of the ocean and demonization of the shark species. Watch at your own risk.
In a real shark attack, the media often portrays the survivor as hero and the shark as villain. But it’s not that simple.
In reality, humans depend on sharks for keeping a natural balance in the ocean.

Sharks are to be revered and respected in their blue home.
© Ajlber/Thinkstock
Sharks have been on earth for over 200 million years; humans, 200,000 years. We need sharks around because they eat marine animals that are sick and weak, leaving a healthier animal population in the ocean for the food we eat. Humans, as it turns out, are only accidental prey.

Graffiti in Wellington, New Zealand, protests shark finning and illustrates the first smiling shark.
© Nathan Garrison
Elyse Frankcom, who was bitten by a shark while guiding a scuba tour, supports shark protection. She explains that government money is better spent on investing in a solution that not only thinks about human safety but will also “preserve the wildlife in the ocean that’s a natural beauty and belongs there.”
Like-minded people began asking, “Might there be a way to protect both the ocean enthusiasts and the sharks?” That’s when the creative thinkers got going, and the idea of shark repellent was born.
The Science Behind Shark Repellent
Surfers, scientists and ocean enthusiasts put their heads together to invent products that allow people to have fun in the sun while protecting sharks living in their natural habitat.
How do the products work? Sharks use electroreception, an electrical signal detection that can spot prey without using their eyes.

How sharks sense prey
© Shark Shield
New products from both Sharkbanz and Shark Shield repel sharks by overriding that sense without causing long-term effects to the shark.

Shark repellent does not come in a can. It comes in a stylish Sharkbanz wrist band.
© Elyse Lu
Sharkbanz, a band placed on the wrist or ankle, sends out magnetic waves that disrupt the shark’s electroreception, and the shark abruptly turns around. Dr. Stroud, senior chemist for, a company researching shark repellent technology, explains it this way:
It is “like a person suddenly shining a very bright light in your eyes in a dark room, and it’s not pleasant.”

“Save a shark. Use a Shark Shield.”
© Jose Debassa
The Shark Shield comes as a cord attached to the ankle or as an antenna connected to the grip pad of a surfboard. These send out electrical waves that cause short-term muscle spasms in the electroreceptors of sharks, also repelling them. They dart away into the blue.
Although Sharkbanz and Sharkshield cannot confirm 100% effectiveness as a repellent, they are absolutely effective in reducing the fears of surfers, divers, kayakers, swimmers, and spear fisherman.
As Dean Gregory from Perth in Western Australia says:
“It takes that little niggle out of the back of my mind, helps you relax and just surf.”
Protecting Surfers, Protecting Sharks
Lindsay Lyon, CEO and managing director of Shark Shield, explains,
“I’d say the biggest ‘Oh, I see’ moment in the business was realizing that selling on fear was a very bad thing. Our brand is about ‘enabling’ our customers to enjoy their adventure sport, it’s not about selling fear, this is the wrong approach.”
Reducing the fear also reduces the need for harmful action against sharks. A win-win for sharks and humans.
Those who enjoy using the ocean have a responsibility to preserve the habitat for all living things. Shark repellents are encouraging us in that direction: to find solutions that work for humans and for the animals in the natural environment we play in.

“Get out there. Surf without fear.”
© Josh Letchworth
Perhaps these Hong Kong children, creative thinkers themselves, said it best when they showed their respect for sharks on Kids Ocean Day:
Thank you, Lindsay from Shark Shield and Nathan from Sharkbanz, for providing me with information and photographs about shark repellent, and thank you especially for your conservation efforts.
Educate yourself about sharks and shark safety at Taronga (Conservation Society of Australia).
Check out shark myths at the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
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