Finally, if a shark hits a person before biting, it will collide. (B) Population growth leads to shark attacks All experiences between sharks and humans are often influenced by population activity. President Ralph Collier, founder and president of the Shark Research Council, says: "If more people are in the water, the shark will meet more, the shark can not sit for a long time or it is a hotspot for beach enthusiasts." II. The most common shark attack and attack at ordinary places (a) White shark shark
However, this shark is also known as one of the three major sharks that are most likely to attack humans (the other two are white shark and tiger shark). Of course, we know that shark attacks are extremely rare (the number of deaths annually caused by world shark attacks is less than 4.5 people), but because this shark is offensive, Bulldog "is called. Most sharks have the same blood concentration in the blood as when swimming. But this does not apply to bull sharks. Instead, their blood contains only 50% of the salt concentration. This makes them very special as they can easily convert from salt water to freshwater. The only result is that they produce urine more than 20 times when swimming in freshwater.
Several myths on shark attacks indicate that sharks live in a place with water. This is totally wrong. In addition to the sea, the only sharks that inhabit in the water are Charcharhnius leucas and Glyphus gangeticus. These two unique sharks swim with the sea only upstream of the river. So do not expect to find anything in your swimming pool. The recorded size of the shaded white shark was imprisoned by Alf Dean. He captured recordable sharks in Australia. The shark is 2,664 pounds and he uses 130 pounds of wire. The exact place he sees is Seduna in Australia. It was captured on April 1, 1959. This shark is the largest catch in Australia
Australia is the most deadly shark attack in the world and Western Australia has recently become the most deadly shark attack site in the world and shark stings have increased dramatically in the past 40 years. Since 2000, there have been 15 deadly shark attacks in coastal areas of Western Australia, now divers face the possibility of 16,000 shark bites. On June 28, 1992, Recife, Brazil officially began carrying out shark attacks on the beach (mainly Boa Viagem Beach). Over the past 20 years, a total of 62 victims were attacked, of which 24 died. The last fatal attack occurred on July 22, 2013. Attacks were caused by bull sharks and tiger sharks. The shock of the Recife shark attack was that many of them were fatal - 21 out of 56 people died and the mortality rate was about 37%.