

LEARNING TO LIVE WITH SHARKS
MIGRATION ON THE CAPE AND ISLANDS
- How risky is your summer swimming? Shark Migration to the Cape and Islands is a featured subject in the conversation following the film After the Bite. Great White sharks have dominated headlines in recent years, as their deadly interactions with people have increased in the waters stretching from Maine to the Cape and Islands. But what are the actual risks? Come join the shark and seal scientists and we talk about the balance of ecological preservation.
HOSTED BY: |
ROB COCUZZOEditor of N Magazine. |
PANELISTS: |
GREG SKOMALis on the faculty at the University of Massachusetts School for Marine Science and Technology and is a guest investigator at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and an adjunct scientist with the Center for Shark Research. |
KIMBERLY MURRAYleads the Seal Ecology and Assessment Program at NOAA Fisheries, Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole. |
IVY MEEROPOLis an award-winning documentary filmmaker and the director of After the Bite. |
CREDITS
Presented in Multiple Parts
AFTER THE BITE
A shark fatality on Cape Cod forces local lifeguards, fishermen, surfers, scientists and citizens to confront ...
88 min | Ivy Meeropol | English
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