You know what they say. There's always a bigger fish.
And when the fishes in question are sharks, it's bound to make a good photo. A sportsman fishing in waters near Kaiteriteri, New Zealand hooked a decent-sized shark Dec. 28, only to have it end up as bait for a giant.
We're guessing the big one got away.
The photo of the sharks was posted to Reddit Dec. 29 and quickly rose to the social news site's front page.
If you're wondering why the sharks' eyes are white, many sharks have a membrane that sheathe and protect their eyes when they go in for a bite. However, some shark species, such as great whites, lack this membrane. Great whites' eyes roll back in their heads when they bite, according to the Smithsonian.
It's not uncommon for sharks to prey upon each other, but it's seldom caught in such dramatic fashion. Of course, there are exceptions.
In May 2012, video of a 16-foot hammerhead shark eating a 6-foot blacktip shark in Florida waters went viral, getting more than 1 million YouTube views. (Warning: Video contains strong language.)
In 2009, the Daily Mail reporte
Push to Ban Sharks
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It's such a fine line between stupid and clever. Random guest posting.
It's such a fine line between stupid and clever. Random guest posting.
- AiA in Atlanta
- Posts: 7262
- Joined: Mon Sep 12, 2011 11:44 pm
Re: Push to Ban Sharks
Shark Eats Shark

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Aussie
Re: Push to Ban Sharks
If there was any basis for it Mattus, do you not think that every surfer on the Planet would be wearing stripes?Mattus wrote:I assumed it was the the great whites in hunting mode that you would most want to deter with the striped wetsuit...freediver wrote:Only great whites do that as far as I know, and only when they are in seal hunting mode. Most sharks will check you out then have a tentative taste, or not.
- freediver
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Re: Push to Ban Sharks
Have you no sense of style Aussie?
I think bull and tiger sharks are a bigger problem, especially in warmer areas. Even most great white attacks are not like the ones where they leap out of the water from below with the seal in the mouth. They are a gentle, tentative bite. That is why there are so many shark attack survivors.
I think bull and tiger sharks are a bigger problem, especially in warmer areas. Even most great white attacks are not like the ones where they leap out of the water from below with the seal in the mouth. They are a gentle, tentative bite. That is why there are so many shark attack survivors.
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Aussie
Re: Push to Ban Sharks
From what specific shark attack? Where are the stats?That is why there are so many shark attack survivors.
- freediver
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Re: Push to Ban Sharks
All of them Aussie. That majority are non-fatal, regardless of species. You may have trouble finding rigorous stats as the sharks don't line up for identification after biting someone. It is also a bit hard to define what constitutes an attack.
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Aussie
Re: Push to Ban Sharks
Okay, as I thought.....this......

.............was just your usual bullshit.I think bull and tiger sharks are a bigger problem, especially in warmer areas. Even most great white attacks are not like the ones where they leap out of the water from below with the seal in the mouth. They are a gentle, tentative bite. That is why there are so many shark attack survivors.
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harvey
- Posts: 255
- Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2011 6:07 pm
Re: Push to Ban Sharks
Gillard is to blame for the (increase in reported) shark attacks, as after all Gillard was meant to be Building the Education Revolution.
So why hasn't the ALP educated the sharks to:
a) recognise humans and,
b) not to attack humans and,
c) hunt outside the flags!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Just another ALP failure.
Can see that there will be a push for the deregulation of Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks Football Club!!!
So why hasn't the ALP educated the sharks to:
a) recognise humans and,
b) not to attack humans and,
c) hunt outside the flags!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Just another ALP failure.
Can see that there will be a push for the deregulation of Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks Football Club!!!
- Outlaw Yogi
- Posts: 2404
- Joined: Mon Jan 16, 2012 9:27 pm
Re: Push to Ban Sharks
Apparently yes, according to both divers and surfers who've tested it.Mattus wrote:Does it work, though?Outlaw Yogi wrote:Sharks are instiktively scared of banded sea snakes.
Meant to have a black & white striped wetsuit made years ago.
Some one beat me to it .. but it works all the same.
Tests I saw showed sharks moving in close, then quickly darting away once the stripes/bands became visible.Mattus wrote:[Sharks are visual hunters surely. But they hunt from below. a striped wetsuit surely won't make any difference to your sillhuotte when seen from below.
Colours apparently make quite a difference too. Bright colours like red, orange, yellow seem to be targeted, where as green and blue seems to be ignored.
It is believed all black wetsuits resemble seals and surfboard + surfer silhouettes resemble turtles, but it's still speculation.
Tests imply otherwise.Mattus wrote:[Edit: even these photos are misleading because the shark won't see colour.
There's also electric shark repllant - small pulses from a battery - which according to rumour works quite well too.
If Donald Trump is so close to the Ruskis, why couldn't he get Vladimir Putin to put novichok in Xi Jjinping's lipstick?
- freediver
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Re: Push to Ban Sharks
It's surprising how quickly the shark shield idea spread compared to the stripey wetsuit thing, even if you do electrocute yourself occasionally.
- Mattus
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Re: Push to Ban Sharks
I question the rigour of this testing. This sounds like a snake oil tiger repellent.Outlaw Yogi wrote: Apparently yes, according to both divers and surfers who've tested it.
If these are the same tests I saw, they were performed under water, not on the surface, and the shark behaved exactly the same with the unstriped control.Outlaw Yogi wrote: Tests I saw showed sharks moving in close, then quickly darting away once the stripes/bands became visible.
Despite plenty of ill informed websites stating the opposite, early vertebrate neurobiologists in Western Australia have shown that sharks are biologically unable to see colour. However, this is not inconsistent with sharks being unable to distinguish some colours, like green and blue, from their backgrounds.Outlaw Yogi wrote: Colours apparently make quite a difference too. Bright colours like red, orange, yellow seem to be targeted, where as green and blue seems to be ignored.
....
Tests imply otherwise.Mattus wrote:[Edit: even these photos are misleading because the shark won't see colour.
While sharks do have electro receptors and can therefore sense these fields, the part of their brain which processes this information is relatively small, while the visual and olfactory centres are much larger. This suggests a visual or olfactory repellant would be much more effective than the electric repellant, and that a shark would likely ignore a repellant where a more poweful visual hunting cue exists.Outlaw Yogi wrote: There's also electric shark repllant - small pulses from a battery - which according to rumour works quite well too.
Which would be a very strong visual hunting cue. And the colour of the wetsuit would make no difference when hidden above a board to a hunter striking from below. But as you say this is speculation and rumour.Outlaw Yogi wrote:It is believed all black wetsuits resemble seals and surfboard + surfer silhouettes resemble turtles, but it's still speculation.
So much of what you read, and what you have said is speculation. While some may be true, I hope you will support funding some real experts to scientifically evaluate them before relying on the repellents.
"I may be the first man to put a testicle in Germaine Greer's mouth"
-Heston Blumenthal
-Heston Blumenthal
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