Calls for cull as friends and family mourn WA teen mauled by shark

Calls for cull as friends and family mourn WA teen mauled by shark

Berry, a yr 11 scholar, had been driving a jet ski at Fremantle when she jumped within the water and was mauled by what’s suspected to be a bull shark on Saturday.

The 2.5-metre shark had reportedly been seen the evening earlier than the assault beneath the Fremantle Bridge however hadn’t been reported till days after the incident. 

Friends collect to mourn Stella Berry (Nine)

Locals, family and friends gathered on the bridge in the present day to mourn the lack of the 16-year-old, with one native crying on the scene.

“Someone lost a daughter,” they stated.

After two shark assaults in two years, locals say they’ve had sufficient and are calling for culling.

“After we’ve lost those 10 lives, then you can make a decision, or you could make a decision now and save them,” native Deane Barker stated.

The City of Fremantle Council has not introduced plans to begin concentrating on sharks within the river, as an alternative, promising to talk with fisheries for recommendation on how one can proceed.

“What this has highlighted is a lot of people don’t know very much about the bull sharks if it is indeed a bull,” mayor Hannah Fitzhardinge stated.

“Education is always a part of the picture, whether signage is a part of that – that’s something we’d take advice on.”

The Bull shark was spotted under the Freemantle the night before the attack, but wasn't reported
The Bull shark was noticed beneath the Freemantle the evening earlier than the assault, however wasn’t reported (Nine)

Bull Sharks should not on the council’s shark tagging program, regardless of specialists saying they need to be, and that it might save the lives of each individuals and sharks.

“A tagging project would be able to tell you ok there are sharks in the area these are the hotspots,” stated Marine skilled Johan Gusteafson.

“What people don’t know is they’re not really lean mean attacking machines, they’re actually quite curious and explorative sharks.”

Source: www.9news.com.au