Solo Patrol
The great white shark usually patrols the water alone, swimming slowly just above the sea floor or close to the surface. Some sharks seem to return to the same feeding grounds annually and show signs of aggressive behaviour around other sharks, as if defending their territory. It is now believed that some of their swimming behaviour is aimed at guarding their personal space, such as the cautiously-timed "turn-aways" between two sharks converging on the same point and when two sharks "parallel-swim," keeping a set distance between them.
Deadly Accuracy
The great white is capable of short bursts of great speed and can jump 7 1/2 feet out of the water in pursuit of prey. It often does a test charge on unfamiliar prey, bashing it with its snout to assess it. When it senses movement or blood, the great white changes direction and swims upwards, homing rapidly in on its prey. Just before impact, its eyes roll back in their sockets and its jaws open wide. Striking at top speed, it tears off a chunk of flesh that it swallows whole. If the prey is large, the shark turns away and waits for it to die before returning to finish it off.
Breeding
Male great white sharks have two claspers below their tail that they use to inject sperm into a female. In the uterus, the young sharks feed on unfertilized eggs and other embryos, and they even swallow their own sets of teeth after they have been shed. When they are born, they are already about 5 feet long and can swim straight away. The mother usually gives birth in shallow waters where the young will be relatively safe from other sharks but otherwise she does nothing more for them.
Slaughtered for Soup
The great white shark is now very rare, yet many are still slaughtered every year. It is killed primarily to make shark fin soup, but in some countries it is caught for sport and is often accidentally trapped in gillnets. Increasingly polluted seas are also a threat to the great white shark, worldwide. It is now a protected species in South Africa, California, the Eastern United States and Australia.
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