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  2. Milk shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_shark

    Smaller sharks eat proportionately more cephalopods and crustaceans, switching to fish as they grow older. [ 10 ] [ 16 ] Many predators feed on the milk shark, including larger sharks such as the blacktip shark ( Carcharhinus limbatus ) and Australian blacktip shark ( Carcharhinus tilstoni ), and possibly also marine mammals . [ 15 ]

  3. Shark meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shark_meat

    Shark meat is a seafood consisting of the flesh of sharks. Several sharks are fished for human consumption, such as porbeagles, shortfin mako shark, requiem shark, and thresher shark, among others. [1] Shark meat is popular in Asia, where it is often consumed dried, smoked, or salted. [2]

  4. Horn shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horn_shark

    They often take advantage of large feeding pits excavated by the bat ray (Myliobatis californica) for shelter and food. As they mature, horn sharks shift into shallower water and their preferred habitat becomes structurally complex rocky reefs or algae beds. [4] This strongly benthic species seldom ventures more than 2 m (6.6 ft) above the ...

  5. 40 Facts About Animals That Might Make You Look Like The ...

    www.aol.com/68-fascinating-animal-facts-probably...

    Unlike most sharks and other vertebrates, which have hard tissues like spines that form growth rings (much like the rings inside a tree trunk), Greenland sharks lack these structures, making age ...

  6. Finetooth shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finetooth_shark

    Finetooth sharks are used for human consumption fresh or dried and salted. Other than off the southeastern United States, this species is of little commercial importance: it is small and occurs in water too shallow for most commercial and recreational fisheries, and is generally too fast-swimming to be caught by shrimp trawlers.

  7. Thresher shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thresher_shark

    When hunting schooling fish, thresher sharks are known to "whip" the water. [15] The elongated tail is used to swat smaller fish, stunning them before feeding. [ 17 ] Thresher sharks are one of the few shark species known to jump fully out of the water, using their elongated tail to propel them out of the water, making turns like dolphins ...

  8. “There were no sharks — ever — in the arena,” says Bartsch. “It would've been very hard to transport sharks for one thing, given that they'd have to be transported in water vessels.”

  9. In the ocean, 'sharks are around you and you just don't know ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/ocean-sharks-around-just...

    Kinsler says the reality of any day at the beach is: There are very often sharks around you, and you just don't know it. "People are in and around sharks when they're swimming just off the shore ...