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Boy who lost arm in North Carolina shark attack is from Colorado Springs

Two teens lose limbs in separate shark attacks at same beach. (Photo: WWAY)

OAK ISLAND, N.C. — A 13-year-old girl and 16-year-old boy each lost an arm Sunday in separate shark attacks at the same North Carolina beach.

Oak Island Mayor Betty Wallace said that the female swimmer was attacked first, around 4:15 p.m. Less than 90 minutes later, as responders were still tending to her, the boy was attacked.

The 16-year-old boy was identified as Hunter Treschel from Colorado Springs, KRDO reported.

It is not typical to shut down the beach or evacuate the water after a shark attack, town spokesman Kyle Thomas said.

Both victims were airlifted to New Hanover Regional Medical Center in Wilmington. Both arrived in critical condition, according to hospital spokeswoman Martha Harlan.

Harlan said each has had an arm amputated — his below the shoulder, hers at the elbow. The girl also sustained serious tissue damage to her leg, according to Harlan.

Both patients have since been upgraded to fair condition.

Wallace said that shark attacks are so rare at Oak Island — a beach town on the state’s southernmost coast — that she couldn’t remember one occurring before Sunday.

Witness Jason Hunter told WWAY that the shark involved in the attack on the boy was 7 or 8 feet long.

Both incidents occurred at high tide in the vicinity of Ocean Crest Pier, a popular destination among beachgoers.

“At the pier this time of year, I’m sure the beach was packed,” said Wallace.

The pier is also a popular spot to fish from, meaning there was likely bait in the water that could have attracted sharks.

Fire Chief Chris Anselmo said that beaches will remain open Monday. The sheriff’s office will have helicopters monitoring the coastline.

Oak Island is home to about 7,000 residents, but tourists swell the population to about 25,000 during the summer, Anselmo said.

About four or five people are bitten by sharks on North Carolina beaches each year, said George Burress, an ichthyologist and fisheries biologist with the Florida Museum of Natural History. The incidents usually involve smaller sharks, he said.

“Having a series of injuries so close to each other in time and space makes this unusual,” he said. “Two in one day very close to each other suggests that there’s a focused problem. It might suggest a single shark has been involved.”

He suspects the predator could be either a bull or tiger shark, both of which are undaunted by larger prey, he said.

“They may have interpreted the humans as being appropriate in size and behavior to give it a shot,” the researcher said.

Only three times in the four decades that he’s been studying sharks has Burgess seen attacks happen “so closely in time and space,” he said. The other incidents occurred in Egypt and Florida.

Any number of factors, including an abundance of fish or nesting turtles, could draw sharks to the area, Burgess said.

Burgess urged people to remember that despite the horrific nature of Sunday’s attacks, shark attacks are unusual. Last year saw 72 attacks, only three of which were fatal, he said.

“Considering the billions of hours we spend in the sea,” he said, “it’s clear that shark attacks aren’t common.”