help!!!!?
i unequivocally need assistance with this subject i need to know if any one has any info upon sharks which eat whales or great persuading things for the impressive divide about how sharks do in actuality eat wales? greatfully i’m desperate!
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By: nothing
6 Responses to help!!!!?
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I would suggest asking in a different category, and putting your question in the question spot. That way, people who know about sharks will click it and be able to answer.
Try the Science / Math – zoology category.
Sarhks normally go after the injured. But I guess if the whale was injured the shark would probably take a bite of him.
Cookie-Cutter sharks (Isistius
brasiliensis) DO feed on whales, often taking huge chunks of flesh
right out of the animal’s belly, back and tailstock?
well being an elf captain that you are, Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon, i would say you should ask Foaly if you could use his system because it is the most advanced system in the world or under. and i believe it also has to do with human whale hunting ships known as whalers. hope you dont have much more trouble with the trolls!
jk i think you should ask librarians and do a web search captain.
There was a shark, but they went extinct
“The Megalodon or Megatooth shark (Carcharodon megalodon, from ancient Greek, megalos + don, lit. “big tooth”) was a giant shark that probably lived between 20 and 1.2 million years ago. Some suggest the shark might have died out more recently, or even might still be alive; see “Relict” below.
The Megalodon is known only from fossil teeth and a few fossilized vertebral centra, and a very few incomplete skeletons (vertebrae columns and associated teeth). The teeth are in many ways similar to great white shark teeth and can measure over 7 inches long (maximum slant length); recent studies cited by Roesch suggest Megalodon was a “close relative” of the great white. A growing number of researchers dispute this, however, and reason that the similarity of the teeth to the great white shark is simply due to convergent evolution.
The best educated estimates of this creature’s maximum size range from 40-50 feet (about 12-15 metres) Previous much larger reconstructions of the shark’s size, up to about 100 feet (30 m), are generally considered inaccurate.
Around 1995 the species was proposed to be placed in the new genus Carcharocles. To date this has not been resolved. Many paleontologists are now favouring Carcharocles and others with more of a marine biology background maintaining its link to the great white shark by placing Megalodon within the Carcharodon genus. Carcharocles proponents give Megalodons likely ancestor as Otodus obliquus from the eocene epoch, and the ancestor of the great white shark not Megalodon but Isurus hastilis, the “broad tooth mako”.
There is a theory that the adult Carcharodon megalodon fed largely on whales and went extinct as the polar seas became too cold for sharks, allowing whales to swim out of reach of sharks during summer.”
Some sites say they do. I’ve listed a few below. The second one says that Great Whites eat small toothed beluga whales. Good luck!