Great White Shark
Carcharodon carcharias
A student web page designed by Robin Dale

Classification
People's Fear of Sharks
Physical Appearance
Food
Habitat
Reproduction
Senses
Migration
A Shark in Captivity
Links
Classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Plylum: Chordata
Class: Chrondrichthyes
SubClass: Elasmobranchii
Order: Lamniformes
Genus: Carchardon
Species: carcharias
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Peoples
Fear of Sharks
Many people have a big fear of sharks, especially Great Whites. A lot
of this comes from movies like Jaws - which is based on a number of attacks
that really happened in New Jersey in 1916. Some people think that there
are tons of sharks waiting to eat them if they venture out into the ocean,
which is simply not true. Sharks rarely ever eat humans and are solitary
animals. They either travel alone or in groups of two.
Shark
attacks are quite rare, in the US there are two to three
non-fatal attacks on swimmers, surfers, and divers per
year. By the number of reported incidents, Dogs kill more
people each year than Great Whites have killed in the last
100 years. There are lots of divers who swim with sharks
and are not attacked. In fact, there are places where you
can be guided on a dive with sharks after just one dive
lesson. They get used to people and get quite tame. Sharks
are misunderstood animals.
Physical
Appearance 
Great White Sharks are a very large species of shark. They are streamlined
swimmers, and have a torpedo-shaped body with a pointed snout.
They have about 3000 teeth, arranged
in several rows. The first two rows of teeth are used for
grabbing and cutting prey, while the teeth in the last
rows rotate into place when front teeth are broken, worn
down, or fall out. The teeth are triangularly shaped with
serrations on the edges.
The back of the shark is a dull
grey colour and the underside is coloured white. They have
three main fins: the dorsal (on back) and two pectoral
fins (on the sides). The tail is crescent shaped. There
are five gill slits on Great White Sharks.
Most of the largest sharks are
found in South Australia. The largest one ever recorded
was 6.4m (21ft) long, and weighed 3312kg! The maximum length
able to grow is thought to be 25ft. Though some people
claim to have seen sharks as long as 31ft. The smallest
Great White shark caught was 47 inches long, but was newly
born. back to the top
Food
Sharks are important predators in the marine ecosystem. Their favorite
prey are seals and sea lions. As juveniles they eat fish, and rays. When
they become full grown they eat marine animals such as whales, seals, dolphins,
large tuna fish, sea otters, and dead animals that they find floating on
the surface. In order to catch its food a shark will go along the sea bottom
and look for shapes at the surface. If it sees something similar to the
shape of a seal they charge full speed. They ram the prey and give it a
first bite all in one motion, which stuns and injures the prey. It then
disappears and allows the prey to bleed to death. When its certain
the preys dead it begins to feed. Sharks dont chew their food,
they just rip it into mouth-sized pieces and swallow it whole. A big meal
can last a shark up to two months.
Habitat
Great White Sharks live in all coastal temperate waters, and have been
known to occasionally make dives into the deep water of open oceans. They
can be found in water as shallow as three feet deep, and as deep as 1280metres.
They can be found on the following coaslines: California to Alaska, the
east coast of the USA, most of the Gulf coast, Hawaii, most of South America,
South Africa, Australia (except the north coast), New Zealand, Mediterranean
Sea, West Africa to Scandinavia, Japan, and the eastern coastline of China
to Russia. back to the top
Reproduction
These sharks are ovoniparous, they give birth to 2-14 fully formed pups
which are up to 1.5m (5ft) long. Fertilization of the eggs occurs in the
female, and later the eggs actually hatch within the female. The young
are nourished by eating unfertilized eggs and smaller siblings in the womb.
There is no placenta with which they can get nourishment from their mother;
they must fend for themselves. The female gives birth to live young, unlike
many other sharks who lay eggs. The newborn gets no help from its mother.
As soon as its born it swims away to begin living its life. A newborn
is about 4ft long, and it grows 25cm (10inches) each year, reaching maturity
at 10 years.
Senses
Sharks have some of the most highly developed senses of any creature. Their
primary sense is the ability to smell. The nostrils can smell a drop a
blood in 100 liters (25 gallons) of water. Their next important sense is
the ability to detect electric charges. They can pick up electrical charges
as small as 0.005 microvolts. The prey can be detected by the electrical
field generated by a beating heart or gill action. Fish in hiding can also
be detected this way. back to the top
Migration
Some females migrate to warmer water to give birth in the fall.
A Shark in Captivity
Great White Sharks aren’t usually kept in captivity. Most of the time, they are brought in because they are injured or sick, and they do not usually survive long. One healthy shark, nicknamed Sandy, was brought into captivity in 1980. She was a 7.5ft Great White and was brought to the Steinhart Aquarium in San Francisco, USA. The aquarium was donut-shaped, and visitors watched from a central viewing area. The tank was set up for fast swimming fish, with a current going around against which the fish swam. It was a good environment for a young shark. The caretakers said there were many ups and downs to having her stay there. She showed little interest in divers who went down into her tank. They soon noticed that she often bumped her nose against the same metal seams in the tank that stuck out about 4inches. So to solve this they put a plastic covering over them to flatten out the seams. Then they noticed that she swam differently at one spot in the tank. At first nothing was detected, but then they realized that there was a tiny change in electrical activity, only 0.125 millivolts – most other sharks and fish wouldn’t have noticed it. They concluded that the only way to fix the problem was to drain the tank, and she would die if she kept bumping her head, so they let her go back into the wild.
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Links: check out these links for more on great white sharks:
Canada's Shark Research Laboratory
Video of Great White Shark hunting!
National Geographic's kids page on Great White Sharks
Monterey Bay Aquarium shark page
Questions and Answers about sharks
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