Bull sharks form social bonds and prefer certain companions, challenging the idea that they are solitary predators. These connections may help them learn, find food, and avoid conflict.
Travel + Leisure on MSN
You Can Swim With Hundreds of Harmless Leopard Sharks Just 2 Hours From Los Angeles—Here's How
In the shallow waters of Southern California, patience and proximity unlock a transcendent encounter with nature.
A 4-foot shark trapped in a public swimming pool in Sydney wasn't enough to keep locals out of the water, The Daily Telegraph ...
Off the southern coast of Fiji’s main island, a group of bull sharks returns to the same reef, week after week, year after ...
“It's not every day you come face to face with the largest fish in the world." ...
Sharks are often viewed as solitary, but a new study—carried out on the Shark Reef Marine Reserve in Fiji—has found that rather than mixing at random, bull sharks have "active social preferences" and ...
However, these 12-foot-long, solitary sharks appear to form important social bonds. A study published today in the journal Animal Behaviour finds that they create these relationships with only a few ...
Bull sharks, it turns out, have friends. Scientists have increasingly recognized that sharks, once viewed as largely solitary creatures, have relatively complex social bonds. But studying those ...
Becky O’Brien always wanted to work with ocean life, but she didn’t realize she’d be able to do the job in the middle of the ...
Hosted on MSN
She knew sharks — and their risks. Now the official search for beloved swimmer Erica Fox ends off Pacific Grove.
PACIFIC GROVE – Search crews using dive teams, drones and rescue boats returned to the waters off Lovers Point on Monday for a second day looking for a swimmer likely attacked by a shark—before ...
The incident occurred near Kurrajong Campground in Exmouth, Australia, on Saturday, March 14 ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results