Saturday, June 6, 2026

Florida's Proposed Shark Feeding Ban Extension Sparks Debate Over Science, Commerce, And Ocean ...

The ocean remembers what we forget. Off the coast of Florida, where the Gulf Stream carries its warm cargo north, a legislative pen stroke now threatens to redraw the boundaries between human appetite and shark hunger. The Florida Safe Seas Act, that tidy euphemism, would push the state's existing feeding ban from a visible three miles to an invisible two hundred—out past where the Continental Shelf drops away and the water turns the color of old ink.

Rep. Daniel Webster calls this mirroring. Longstanding law, he says, responsible conservation, risk prevention. The words line up like soldiers at a parade. But Dr. Matt Ajemian at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, a man who has spent his working hours among the data sets and tagging records, finds the evidence lacking.

The affected sharks?

A sliver.

The behavioral shift?

Not documented with any rigor that would satisfy a peer review.

What we have instead is policy dressed in lab coat white, borrowing the language of science without submitting to its discipline.

Here is what the operators know: a single shark dive in Palm Beach County can generate thousands of dollars per trip, multiplied across seasons, multiplied again by the cameramen and the travel journalists and the honeymooners who want to post something that beats their friends' beach selfies. The industry built itself on a transaction—chum for proximity, blood and oil for the thrill of teeth visible through a metal cage. The sharks come, yes. They circle.

They feed. Then they vanish back into the statistical dark of a population scientists still struggle to count.

The irony, if irony is what we are watching, lies in the geography of fear. Florida's state ban already keeps feeding close to shore, where swimmers actually swim. The extension to two hundred miles protects no one on a beach in Daytona. It protects an idea: that the wild can be managed by distance, that what happens beyond the horizon somehow contaminates what happens within sight of the ⚡guard stand.

This is governance by metaphor.

The far becomes the near becomes the dangerous becomes the banned.

Shark tourism operators speak now of livelihoods, of families, of boats that will not float on principle alone. But beneath that practical urgency runs something older—a recognition that the ocean does not recognize our zones, our economic exclusivities, our House bills. A shark tagged off Jupiter Island in March may breach a Virginia researcher's receiver by June. The fish do not carry passports. They do not know where Florida ends and federal begins.

What remains when the rhetoric clears? A gap. Between what we fear and what threatens us. Between the spectacle of feeding and the reality of attack statistics, which cluster reliably in murky inlets at dusk, not in open water where the dive boats anchor. Between the politics of appearing to act and the slower, less visible work of actually understanding.

The bill now sits in that legislative elsewhere, not yet law, not yet failure. Meanwhile the operators wait. The sharks, presumably, continue their migrations along coastlines older than the concept of exclusive economic zones. The water carries what it carries. The pen waits for its next movement, while the ocean, patient and unimpressed, does what it has always done—makes us small, makes our categories provisional, reminds us that every boundary we draw dissolves at sufficient depth.

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Florida's Proposed Shark Feeding Ban Extension Sparks Debate Over Science, Commerce, And Ocean ...

The ocean remembers what we forget. Off the coast of Florida, where the Gulf Stream carries its warm ...