This Article is From Oct 02, 2014

Surfer Loses Arm in Shark Attack in Australia

Surfer Loses Arm in Shark Attack in Australia

a woman is comforted by a police officer on Clarkes Beach of Byron Bay on Australia's east coast.(AP)

Sydney: A man had part of his arm torn off by a suspected great white shark while surfing off the coast of Western Australia on Thursday, officials said.

The man was surfing at Wylie Bay in the town of Esperance on Western Australia's remote southern coast when he was attacked by what is believed to be a 4-meter (13-foot) great white, Esperance Shire President Malcolm Heasman said.

A fellow surfer managed to get the victim to shore and to a nearby parking lot where there was an off-duty ambulance officer, Heasman said. The ambulance officer gave the man first aid while they waited for help to arrive.

The victim lost one arm below the elbow and had extensive injuries on his other arm, likely from trying to fend off the shark, Heasman said. The man, who was a visitor to the area, also had lacerations to his legs. He was in stable condition and was being flown to a hospital in Perth for treatment.

Police had retrieved the man's surfboard, which was covered in bite marks, Heasman said.

Beaches in the area were closed and fisheries officials were trying to catch the shark, state fisheries department spokeswoman Donna Cole said.

It was the second attack by a suspected great white shark in the waters off Esperance in a year. Last October, a man was seriously injured by what officials believe was a great white while diving for abalone off Poison Creek, an area near the town.

There had been a few shark sightings in the Wylie Bay area in recent weeks, though that's not considered unusual for the area during the Australian spring, Heasman said.

Although sharks are common in Australian waters, the country has averaged fewer than two fatal attacks per year in recent decades.
.