Bull sharks form social bonds and prefer certain companions, challenging the idea that they are solitary predators. These ...
New research is suggesting that not all sharks are the lone, cold, ruthless predators as many films so often depict them.
Odd News on MSN
Bull sharks have friends, and that’s a wonderful thing
A heartwarming finding about cold-blooded creatures of the deep.
Off the southern coast of Fiji’s main island, a group of bull sharks returns to the same reef, week after week, year after ...
Bull sharks (Carcharhinus leucas) have a really bad reputation. The ocean’s bad boys are responsible for at least 100 ...
Bull sharks may have a reputation as lone hunters, but new research reveals they actually form social bonds and even have ...
Weighing up to 500 pounds and measuring more than 11 feet long, bull sharks are massive apex predators that can live in both ...
Sharks are often viewed as solitary, but a new study—carried out on the Shark Reef Marine Reserve in Fiji—has found that ...
IFLScience on MSN
Even 3-meter-long bull sharks can have best mates – "The sharks are actively choosing who they associate with"
The concept of friends in the animal world is one that’s been studied fairly frequently. We’ve learned that jaguars have best ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Like Humans, Bull Sharks Have Complex Social Circles That Include Forming Friendships and Avoiding Rivals
Learn more about the complexities of bull shark social behavior and how it can be rather similar to humans.
Sharks might be seen as the baddies of the ocean but scientists say they have besties too. Shakes are usually thought to be ...
A long-term study in Fiji shows they form preferred social relationships, avoid certain individuals, and change how social ...
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