Friday, 24 June 2016

Shark Behviour




Behavior
Most sharks are especially active in the evening and night when they hunt. Some sharks migrate over great distances to feed and breed. This can take them over entire ocean basins. While some shark species are solitary, others display social behavior at various levels. Hammerhead sharks, for instance, school during mating season around seamounts and islands.

Some shark species, like the great white shark, attack and surprise their prey, usually seals and sea lions, from below. Species that dwell on the ocean floor have developed the ability to bottom-feed. Others attack schooling fish in a feeding frenzy, while large sharks like the whale and basking sharks filter feed by swimming through the ocean with their mouths open wide, filtering large quantities of plankton and krill.

Wednesday, 22 June 2016

Shark Teeth







Sharks have the most powerful jaws on the planet.  Unlike most animals' jaws, both the sharks' upper and lower jaws move.
A shark bites with it's lower jaw first and then its upper.  It tosses its head back and forth to tear loose a piece of meat which it swallows whole.

Sharks never run out of teeth.  If one is lost, another spins forward from the rows and rows of backup teeth.

Monday, 20 June 2016

Sharks

FACTS ABOUT SHARKS


There are more than 465 known types of sharks living in our oceans today. Sharks are dangerous predator at near the top of their ocean food chains, and they regulate the populations of species below them. Research has shown that massive depletion of sharks has cascading effects throughout the ocean’s ecosystems. This is very good for us because in this cycle we have chance to get new species of shark types