And you thought fish were fun!
Part 1 of flying fish!
Leaping sturgeon menace 'Swanee'

Florida boater victim count rises

Boaters on Florida's Suwannee ("Swanee") river have come under increasing risk of leaping sturgeon attack during the last 18 months as low water levels continue to provoke serious collisions between the "armoured fish" and unwary humans, the Telegraph reports.
Florida police say that this year has been "particularly bloody", with five victims to date including 50-year-old Sharon Touchton who was piloting a jetski when she impacted with a sturgeon, suffering skull fractures under her eyes, losing a finger and a tooth and almost biting off her own tongue in the process.

The Gulf sturgeon in question, which can reach eight feet in length and boast "sharp, bony plates that can cut flesh like knives", are not aggressive by nature, scientists claim, but the boffins are unable to offer an explanation for their acrobatics.
The sturgeon menace has been compounded by the aforementioned low water levels as boats and fish have to share increasingly restricted patches of river. Sturgeon strikes were previously uncommon, but ten people were injured last year.
This 2007 tally of casualties so far includes the unfortunate Touchton, plus 32-year-old Tara Spears "knocked unconscious and taken to the hospital" following a piscine impact, and six-year-old Taylor Lane Owen who suffered a broken leg when a sturgeon jumped onto the boat he was sharing with 20-year-old Kelly Clafin.
Major Bruce Hamlin, regional commander for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's (FWC) North Central Region, told the local NewsHerald.com: "The documented strikes for 2006 resulted in the worst year on record, with eight people directly hit by sturgeon and two injured when they swerved to avoid a jumping fish and hit a bridge piling.
"However, the numbers for 2007 show a trend that could top 2006. At this point last year, there were three documented strikes, with three injuries. People need to be cautious when on the Suwannee. I cannot emphasize that enough."
Some boat owners have suggested the sturgeon, which in spring migrate from the Gulf of Mexico to the Suwannee to spawn, might be "removed" to contain the threat, but although they were once exploited for their caviar and meat, they are now a protected, endangered species.

Leaping sturgeon become boating hazard
Increasingly, the large fish collide with boats and people.
a sturgeon hit Lacy Redd, knocking her out, collapsing a lung and breaking five of her ribs.
TALLAHASSEE -- Forget sharks, alligators and sting rays. The latest Florida menace is giant leaping sturgeon.
Gainesville elementary school principal Lacy Redd, 34, was boating on the Suwannee River over the Memorial Day weekend when a sturgeon, some 5 to 6 feet long and between 130 and 150 pounds, leaped into her family's boat and knocked her out. She suffered a collapsed lung and five broken ribs.
On July 4, 19-year-old Danny Cordero of Perry was zipping along the Suwannee on a personal watercraft with his girlfriend when -- WHAM! A sturgeon knocked them both in the water.
"I don't remember anything," Cordero said. "My girlfriend said it was like hitting a brick wall. She saw me lying face down in the river. I had blood all over me. It cracked my teeth and chewed up my gums.
"I get picked on pretty bad. People say: "You got knocked down by a fish?' It's not any ordinary fish. It's a huge fish."
A sturgeon made headlines in March when a 6-foot-long, 127-pound specimen washed up in a Shore Acres neighborhood in St. Petersburg. The fish more typically travel from the Gulf of Mexico up into rivers to spawn in the spring and summer, then head back to the gulf in the fall. It's a ritual that went on long before Florida had people driving bass boats and personal watercraft.
No one keeps statistics on crashes between sturgeon and boaters. Some people who live on the Suwannee say the collisions are on the rise.
"If they were little, like the size of mullet, that would be one thing," said Gilchrist County Sheriff's Chief Harvey Montgomery.
University of Florida researcher Frank Chapman said that in the Suwannee River, at least, the number of sturgeon hasn't increased in the past 20 years. But boat traffic has risen.
Why do the sturgeon jump?
"We don't know," Chapman said. "They just jump!"
They were really jumping the day Redd was hit.
She said she saw a sturgeon jumping ahead of her family's boat as they cruised the Suwannee. Just as she said to her husband and children, "Look at . . .," another sturgeon hit her.
"They jump a lot," she said. "It's more common than you'd think."
The fish folded the boat's steering wheel in half. With his kids panicking, Lacy's husband, Paul, looked for his wife.
"I'll be honest. I thought she was dead," Paul said.
A minute earlier, she had handed their 1-year-old child over to Paul, which probably saved the child's life.
"The game commission decided to release the fish because it is a protected species," he said. "I told them: I want that fish. Later, I found out they released it."


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