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  • In 2011 The Bahamas was declared a shark sanctuary, banning the killing of sharks. The ban would not have happened if sharks didn't attract tourist revenue. This Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) was killed despite the ban in 2013. The law and the perception of sharks has a gap that is slowly being filled as more local Bahamians reap the rewards of shark tourism.
    Fear Killed The Shark
  • The jaws of a lemon shark are designed to eat fish. The bottom teeth are skinny and pointy to grip the thrashing fish while the top teeth are serrated and efficient at cutting flesh. Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    Lemon Shark Jaw
  • Bonnethead sharks (Sphyrna tiburo) are the first shark species discovered to be omnivorous. They ingest copious amounts of seagrass while feeding on crabs and are able to retain nutrients from the plants. Sharks in captivity that only had access to seagrass actually gained weight.
    Bonnethead Shark.jpg
  • A great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) passes by a submerged shark cage with tourists off Guadalupe Island, Mexico
    2015_10_16GuadD1128.jpg
  • Researchers Ian Bouyoucos and Cam Raguse test whether a lemon shark pup (Negaprion brevirostris) had been previously tagged at the Cape Eleuthera Insitute in The Bahamas. Lemon shark pups spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development.
    2015_09_09_CEI392.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0813.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0723.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0610.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0608.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) are social animals, proven to form friendships. Lemon shark pups spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_17HI265-2.jpg
  • A lemon shark pup (Negaprion brevirostris) in a research tank at the Cape Eleuthera Institute in The Bahamas is used for a study on the social lives of sharks before being released back into the wild. Lemon shark pups spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2015_11_30HI397.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    20170930-1291.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0838.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0720.jpg
  • A scuba diver feeds an invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans) to a Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas. It was once thought that if the sharks learned that lionfish taste good they would actively hunt live lionfish. So far, that has not been the case.
    2016_06_19Freeport615.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_09_27LemonShark789.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    20170930-1205.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0973.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_16HI715.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0940.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0917.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0918.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0809.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0811.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0756.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0716.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0668.jpg
  • A great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) comes right for the camera in Bimini, Bahamas.
    2013_mar19_Bimini552 copy.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over sandy seabed off Bimini, Bahamas.
    2013_mar18_Bimini205.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI1122.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI1299.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_09_14LemonShark249.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI1048.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0961.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0774.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0749.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0609.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0607.jpg
  • Salmon shark (Lamna ditropis) nearing sea surface, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, Pacific Ocean.
    20220628-500_0606.jpg
  • A Lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) dies after likely being caught and released by sport fisherman. The hook was removed by removing much of the shark's face and head. Image made in the Florida Keys, USA.
    20190607-500_0042.jpg
  • A Lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) dies after likely being caught and released by sport fisherman. The hook was removed by removing much of the shark's face and head. Image made in the Florida Keys, USA.
    20190607-500_0034.jpg
  • A female scuba diver uses an action camera to film a great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) as it passes by a submerged shark cage off Guadalupe Island, Mexico.
    2015_10_18GuadD3087.jpg
  • Despite the Bahamas being declared a shark sanctuary in 2011, their reputation among the local population is less than popular. Many fisherman will kill sharks simply for the sake of killing a shark. Here a Caribbean Reef Shark (Carcharhinus perezi) was killed, decapitated and simply dumped off a fish cleaning dock. No fish, jaws, teeth or anything else were removed.
    2013_Jan5_HI014.jpg
  • A scuba diver feeds an invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans) to a Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas. It was once thought that if the sharks learned that lionfish taste good they would actively hunt live lionfish. So far, that has not been the case.
    2016_06_19Freeport616.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_09_15Lemons507.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0106.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    20170605HI0041.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_09_28LemonShark099.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0952.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0908.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0855.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_17HI526.jpg
  • An adult lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) pauses in the sand to be cleaned by a small cleaner wrasse. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas.
    2014_10_06TB719 2.jpg
  • A portrait of a a great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) in deep water, producing a black background. Image made off Guadalupe Island, Mexico.
    2015_10_18GuadD3402.jpg
  • Scuba divers interact with a Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) in Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini595.jpg
  • A lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) swimming over sargassum seabed off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas.
    2014_10_10TB022.jpg
  • Oceanic Whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus) rarely swims in this shallow water. Cat Island, Bahamas.
    _DSC0200.jpg
  • Pelagic thresher shark (Alopias pelagicus) being cleaned by a bluestreak cleaner wrasse (Labroides dimidiatus) at Monad Shoal off Malapascua Island, Philippines.
    20181014-500_9507.jpg
  • An adult brown banded bamboo shark (Chiloscyllium punctatum) rests on a pristine coral reef near Alor, Indonesia.
    20180926-500_3832.jpg
  • A clasper, the shark equivilent of a penis, of a nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) ready to mate.
    20170605HI0784.jpg
  • A scuba diver feeds an invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans) to a Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas. It was once thought that if the sharks learned that lionfish taste good they would actively hunt live lionfish. So far, that has not been the case.
    2016_06_19Freeport697.jpg
  • An invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans) is fed to a Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas. It was once thought sharks could be trained to feed on lionfish by feeding them speared lionfish which, so far, this has proved to be false.
    2016_06_18Freeport082.jpg
  • Great Hammerhead Shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming along a coral reef wall in the Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park, Bahamas
    20170716EX_221.jpg
  • A Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) swims along the edge of a blue hole in The Bahamas.
    20170710NAS111.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_17HI650.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_02_22HI725.jpg
  • Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) pup swims near the surface off Harbour Island, Bahamas.
    20200609-500_1190.jpg
  • Blacktip reef shark (Carcharhinus melanopterus) in a shallow lagoon on Moorea, French Polynesia.
    20210816-500_6372.jpg
  • A Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezii) with a wire leader hanging from her mouth off New Providence, Bahamas. Sharks are often observed with hooks, scars or other evidence of encounters with fisherman. It has been illegal to catch sharks in The Bahamas since 2011.
    20180722-500_8294.jpg
  • Lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) hunting over a seagrass (Thalassia testudinum) meadow in the Florida Keys, Florida, USA.
    20190605-500_9775.jpg
  • Bonnethead shark (Sphyrna tiburo) hunting in a seagrass meadow (Thalassia testudinum). Bonnetheads are the first known omnivorous shark, eating seagrass and retaining its nutrients. Image made in the Florida Keys, USA.
    20180629-500_7066 2.jpg
  • A great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) off Guadalupe Island, Mexico.
    2015_10_17Guad083.jpg
  • A male great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) portrait off Guadalupe Island, Mexico
    2015_10_16GuadD1159.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini535.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini278.jpg
  • The tail end of a Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini384.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) at the surface at sunset off Bimini in The Bahamas.
    2015_01_29_bimini577.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini538c.jpg
  • The broad head of a Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini322.jpg
  • Face portrait of a great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) off Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_29_bimini344 2.jpg
  • Tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) with bar jacks (Caranx ruber) riding the bow wave of the shark. Image made at Tiger Beach, Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas.
    2014_10_09TB300.jpg
  • Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) with a fishing hook left in her mouth. Image made in The Bahamas.
    2014_10_08TB463.jpg
  • Juvenile nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) in a mangrove forest, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2013_mar19_Bimini184.jpg
  • Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi), male, sleeping under a coral reef ledge, Harbour Island, Bahamas.
    2012_Harbour Island310.jpg
  • Pelagic thresher shark (Alopias pelagicus) being cleaned by a bluestreak cleaner wrasse (Labroides dimidiatus) at Monad Shoal off Malapascua Island, Philippines.
    20181016-500_9833.jpg
  • Pelagic thresher shark (Alopias pelagicus) being cleaned by a bluestreak cleaner wrasse (Labroides dimidiatus) at Monad Shoal off Malapascua Island, Philippines.
    20181014-500_9535.jpg
  • A baby nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum), or pup, swims in a mangrove forest. The little sharks take advantage of the many places to hide in mangroves or under rocks. Image made in Bimini, Bahamas.
    2013_mar19_Bimini207.jpg
  • Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) patrolling a coral reef filled with schoolmaster snapper (Lutjanus apodus) and other fish. Jardines de la Reina, Gardens of the Queen National Park, Cuba
    20170216GOTQ0757.jpg
  • A Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) swims over a coral reef off Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    20171130-DSC_1809.jpg
  • A Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) and a school of horse eye jacks (Caranx latus) under a catamaran boat in The Bahamas.
    20170717EX_667.jpg
  • A Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) swims over manatee grass (Syringodium filiforme) off Nassau, Bahamas
    20170710NAS557.jpg
  • Whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus) and pilot fish (Naucrates ductor) with an underwater photographer off Tubuai, French Polynesia.
    20210823-500_6600.jpg
  • Whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus) and pilot fish (Naucrates ductor) with an underwater photographer off Tubuai, French Polynesia.
    20210823-500_6599.jpg
  • Gray reef shark (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos) on Father's Reef, Papua New Guinea.
    2015_05_04_PNGD6_864.jpg
  • Portrait of a whale shark (Rhincodon typus) in Mexico.
    2010-08-19 Cancun Whale Sharks369.jpg
  • A lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) pup in a mangrove nursery in The Bahamas.
    20200614-500_1363.jpg
  • Whitetip reef shark (Triaenodon obesus) swimming along a coral reef in Kimbe Bay, Papua New Guinea.
    2015_05_04_PNGD6_833.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2015_01_30_bimini493.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swimming over a sandy seabed, Bimini, Bahamas
    2015_01_30_bimini411.jpg
  • A great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) swims over a sandy seabed in The Bahamas.
    2015_01_29_bimini467.jpg
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Shane Gross

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