Anti-Shark Suits

Wearing this wet suit a surfer is invisible to sharks

shark, wetsuit, australia, surfing, swimming, camoflage, Visiting Australia taught me two things. One, surfing is a lot fun, and two, the waters around Perth are teaming with Great Whites.

Shark Attack Mitigation Systems (SAMS) has created two suits that confuse the shark into believing humans in the water aren’t worth their time.

The first suit, the “Diverter”, is designed to be used primarily by surfers. Unlike traditional black wetsuits, the Diverter’s one big modification is a bold black and white banding pattern.

According to researchers at the University of Western Australia (“UWA”), patterns like the one printed on the Diverter suit confuse sharks into believing that the wearer is actually a really gnarly tasting morsel. “Many animals in biology are repelled by noxious animals — prey that provide a signal that somehow says ‘Don’t eat me’ — and that has been manifest in a striped pattern,” said Shaun Collin.

The “Elude”, SAMS’ second suit, acts more like a traditional camouflage, and plays with the sharks perception of light and color. Once in the suit snorkelers are hidden from sharks by blending in the water column.

Over the past two years SAMS and the UWA have been testing their new suit technology off the coast of Western Australia using chummed-up dummies outfitted with patterned materials to both attract and dissuade tiger sharks from taking the bait. Because of the success of these tests, the group will now move their research to South Africa, another hotspot for great white activity, in hope of proving the universality of their designs.

While I’m not going to be the first to jump into a tank full of sharks to test these suits, SAMS’ new technology seems like it could spell the end of people being terrified of entering the water. Cue, the JAWS theme music. 

Watch a Video About the Suits:

Image and Video Courtesy of SAMS