How To Use Nurse shark In A Sentence

  • Over the week they were rewarded by the sight of slumbering nurse sharks, moray eels, hawksbill turtles, stingrays, bounteous barracuda, big solitary midnight parrotfish and African pompano.
  • After squizzing a 4’ nurse shark, we returned to the dinghy and motored over to check out another spot.
  • DNA data will help create a clear picture of the area's nurse shark population and its dynamics.
  • We see grey nurse sharks and stingrays and dolphins are a common sight in the bay.
  • At the other end of the spectrum, nurse sharks are popular with aquarists, though they are highly predatory, often eating other organisms in the same tank.
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  • The more daring divers can approach the screen that separates the pools, and poke small baitfish through holes to the dozen nurse sharks waiting hungrily on the other side.
  • The Nurse Shark has a small mouth with what looks like a moustache to help it find food.
  • The nationwide biggest shark museum at present, where there are thousands of fierce lemon shark, nurse shark, as well as Whitetip Reef Shark, Blacktip Reef Shark, Suction Shark, etc.
  • Over the week they were rewarded by the sight of slumbering nurse sharks, moray eels, hawksbill turtles, stingrays, bounteous barracuda, big solitary midnight parrotfish and African pompano.
  • Here you can swim among stingrays and nurse sharks in shallow, 8-to-10-feet-deep waters.
  • But once out there, it's not unusual to see spotted rays or even nurse sharks cruising along a 2,000-foot wall, or for anglers to hook bonefish, tarpon, or snook.
  • The nurse shark relies on its sense of olfaction, touch and electrical reception.
  • Mitchell and colleagues found antibiotic-resistant bacteria in seven species of shark—such as bull sharks, lemon sharks, and nurse sharks—as well as the redfish Sciaenops ocellata.
  • The greatest threat to the grey nurse shark is from fishing and accidental hooking, and shark finning .
  • All manner of sea life dwells in this remarkable sanctuary, but the most exciting and abundant are the resident grey nurse sharks.
  • The Nurse Shark has a small mouth with what looks like a moustache to help it find food.
  • Grey nurse sharks grow relatively slowly and mature at between four and six, though the precise timing of mating and pupping in Australian waters remains unknown.
  • Coming back to True North we see two large tawny nurse sharks circling the back of the boat. Times, Sunday Times

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