I'm sitting here watching Shark Week on TV and they showed a short segment on an effective shark repellent that works made with "necromones" or pheromones made from putrefied shark flesh. It works very well, but is expensive. There are published reports on its effectiveness in the scientific literature (link at end of post).
That seems to me to be yet another argument for the State to allow people to catch sharks from the pier.
I'm wondering if some of the shark fishermen might keep some meat or guts (from a shark caught elsewhere) and have/find a place where they can let it putrefy (maybe sealed in an airtight container). If some of the putrefied shark was put in the water either from a boat upcurrent from the pier or from the pier (it would not be chumming, but you never know what the State would say), then then it might do something to reduce the sharks around the pier.
If the experiment worked, then that would be an even more powerful argument for allowing sharks to be caught and killed.
Personally, I'm not going to be down until August and we are going to be boat fishing then, but if I get a shark I will keep some and put it in an airtight box.
Chemical shark repellent: Myth or fact? The effect of a shark necromone on shark feeding behavior