Shark culling has still been a problem for many years in WA. The "catch and kill" program has been applied to sharks where the sharks will be killed if they find the sharks more than 3 meters. They are using a technique where they put the blood and the sharks are attracted to the blood, they get close to the blood and then they kill the sharks where they would have to use a tracking system like the US has. Then they follow the sharks so that everyone knows where the sharks are on that beach or not. Sharks are considered the main spice of the ocean, which means that sharks are extremely important in maintaining the balance of marine ecosystems. (Riesa Su, 2014) Removing all sharks from an ecosystem can lead to a massive change in the balance and by which the food chain can be affected (mewing J, 2010). Shark culling should be stopped, there is no need to kill them. Sharks live in their homes and attack only when people try to get close to them. The government didn't realize that they are also killing animals that live under water and animals like dolphins and sea turtles, similar creatures (Brawny sphere). The WA Government's shark culling policy is infectious and damaging to politics. The government is wasting money and damaging the environment. Mr Colin Barnett pays more than $5,700 a day to a fisherman who monitors drum lines and the State Government has authorized $6.85 million to fund the project, of which $2 million will be spent specifically on tracking large whites and puncture the drum lines to kill them. Over the past twenty years, approximately one person has been killed per year (McPhee, 2012). . However, seven people have lost their lives to shark attacks, in the last three alone. (Guest Blogger, 2014) In the year (1959 to 1967) in Hawaii, the drum beats......center of the card......balanced for over 400 million years. Shark culling has already been carried out in Hawaii and shark culling has not worked. Between 1959 and 1976, when 4668 sharks were killed off the coast of Hawaii in an attempt to increase public fear and reduce shark attacks, but in Australia, where shark culling has been the primary killing technique for years, we see the same lack of effectiveness. Shark nets have been effective in catching and killing a high percentage of marine creatures, but marine scientists and shark experts still do not fully understand the consequences of removing sharks from the ecosystem. Some people who don't care about the ecosystem should have one thing in mind: sharks belong in the ocean, and humans out of the ocean, which will improve the ecosystem. Surfers especially have to accept the fact that the ocean belongs to the sharks.
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