Expert Voices

Should You Worry About Getting Bitten by a Shark?

Sharks don't "hunt" humans. And shark bites are almost always cases of mistaken identity.
Sharks don't "hunt" humans. And shark bites are almost always cases of mistaken identity.
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Sharks elicit outsized fear, even though the risk of a shark bite is infinitesimally small. As a marine biologist and director of the Florida Program for Shark Research, I oversee the International Shark Attack File — a global record of reported shark bites that has been maintained continuously since 1958.

We are careful to emphasize how rare shark bites are: You are 30 times more likely to be struck by lightning than be bitten by a shark. You are more likely to die while taking a selfie, or be bitten by a New Yorker. In anticipation of the anxiety that's typically generated by the Discovery Channel's Shark Week programming, here are a few things about sharks that are often overlooked.