Uganda should create a board to protect fish in our lakes just like it has been done in South Africa.
The KwaZulu-Natal Sharks Board has protected the province’s bathing beaches from shark attacks for 50 years. The Sharks Board is also involved in vital shark research and educates the public about sharks and their behaviour.
Did you know? The Sharks Board was created in 1964 after a series of shark attacks along the greater Durban coastline.
A visit to the KwaZulu-Natal Sharks Board headquarters in Umhlanga Rocks, north of Durban, is popular among local school learners and interested members of the public.
Here audiences are enlightened on the work of the Sharks Board via an audio-visual presentation, followed by a shark dissection and discussion that can be viewed from a curved, tiered seating arena.
The venue also features photographs, shark replicas, reconstructed skeletons, sharks’ teeth and mounts of different species.
For a more interactive experience, the Board also takes members of the public out at dawn on their tour boats to see first-hand how nets are maintained off Durban’s Golden Mile. The highlight of such a trip is the opportunistic viewing of dolphins, whales and seabirds.
Achieving a balance between the protections of bathers and minimising impact on the marine environment led to a net reduction programme some years ago.
Total coverage of shark safety gear (nets and/or drumlines) has gradually been reduced from 44km of coverage along the KwaZulu-Natal coastline to 23km, without adversely compromising bather safety.
Today the Sharks Board provide a shark protection service at 38 beaches along the KwaZulu-Natal coast, between Richards Bay in the north and Port Edward in the south.
Operations staff is accommodated at 11 base stations along the KwaZulu-Natal coast, which enables surf launches at first light. Nets and shark safety gear are checked for specimens caught overnight, and damaged nets are repaired or replaced.
The last attack at a protected beach took place in 1999, a vindication of the success of the Sharks Board in reducing shark attacks on bathers and surfers.