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Home » Online Articles » Bull sharks, balance, and the future of Australia’s oceans
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Bull sharks, balance, and the future of Australia’s oceans

Mike PsillakisBy Mike PsillakisFebruary 24, 20264 Mins Read
Bull shark, have humans caused an imbalance?
Bull shark, have humans caused an imbalance?

Australia is a nation that prides itself on science, conservation, and responsible environmental management. We manage kangaroos, crocodiles, deer, and even wolves overseas. Not because we hate wildlife, but because we understand that ecosystems require balance, not ideology.

Today, I want to ask a difficult question that many are afraid to raise:  Are bull sharks in modern Australia more abundant than our altered ecosystems can naturally support, and if so, do we have a responsibility to manage them?

We do not live in a natural ocean anymore

The oceans around Australia are no longer pristine wilderness. They are Anthropocene ecosystems, shaped by overfishing, coastal urbanisation, warming waters, and marine protected areas that benefit some species more than others.

Bull sharks are among the most adaptable predators on earth. They thrive in freshwater, estuaries, harbours, and human-altered coastlines. They reproduce efficiently and exploit human-created food sources. 

Meanwhile, many competing sharks, hammerheads, reef sharks, large pelagic predators have declined. In ecology, we call this mesopredator release – when resilient predators increase because their competitors or super-predators are removed. 

Bull sharks are winners in the human altered ocean.

The myth of “natural” abundance

Conservation often assumes today’s populations reflect nature’s original balance. But scientists call this shifting baseline syndrome. We forget what ecosystems looked like before industrial disruption. Pre-industrial Australia had very different shark communities. Today’s bull shark dominance may not be natural at all. It may be a human-created imbalance. And conserving an imbalance is not conservation. It is ecological denial.

Ecosystem and human consequences

Bull sharks are powerful, opportunistic apex predators. If their numbers are inflated, they can suppress vulnerable fish and shark species, restructure estuarine and reef ecosystems, reduce biodiversity through competitive dominance, and yes, there is also human–shark conflict. 

As coastal populations grow, encounters increase. Exposure and predator density are not mutually exclusive explanations. Both matter. On land, we accept wildlife management to protect ecosystems and people. Why should the ocean be exempt from responsible management?

The Data Gap is not an excuse

Here is the uncomfortable truth: We do not have comprehensive bull shark population data in Australia. Yet we confidently claim they are not overabundant. That is not science. That is ideology disguised as science. 

If we do not measure populations, we cannot declare them balanced. Evidence- based conservation must apply to predators as much as prey.

This is not a call for eradication

Let me be absolutely clear, this is not a call to wipe out bull sharks. They are magnificent animals and an essential part of marine ecosystems. 

This is a call for responsible, science-based management. The same principle we apply to every other large wildlife species.

What could that look like? Comprehensive population surveys and tagging programs. Ecological carrying capacity models. Controlled, regulated harvest quotas. Targeted management in urban estuaries. Full transparency in reporting shark populations and impacts. 

This is Fisheries management, not indiscriminate culling. The precautionary principle must be consistent. Conservationists rightly invoke the precautionary principle to prevent species collapse. 

But precaution must apply both ways: To prevent ecosystem imbalance; To protect biodiversity; To reduce human–wildlife conflict. 

Precaution cannot be selectively applied only when it fits ideology.

From romanticism to ecological realism

Sharks are not political symbols. They are biological actors in complex systems. 

Romanticising predator abundance in a heavily altered ecosystem is not environmentalism – it is ecological fantasy. 

In the Anthropocene, humans are already ecosystem managers. 

Choosing not to manage is still a management decision with consequences.

Responsible coexistence

Bull sharks deserve protection from extinction. But protection does not mean immunity from management. True conservation means actively restoring balance, not freezing ecosystems in an artificial, human-altered state. 

We must move beyond slogans and confront reality with science, transparency, and courage. Because the future of Australia’s oceans will not be decided by ideology. It will be decided by how honestly we are willing to manage the world we have already changed.

Thank you 

Follow @psillakissurfboards on socials for more outstanding updates on surfing, custom board making, the ocean, and more.

Issue 57
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