Sharks do not seek out blood specifically as a food source, but they are attracted to the scent of blood in the water as it can signal the presence of injured or struggling prey. Sharks primarily rely on their keen sense of smell to locate potential food sources, and blood can act as a strong attractant for them.
No, sharks can vary in color depending on their species but they are typically gray, brown, or blue. Green is not a common color for sharks.
Yes blood, metal etc...
-sharks have cartalige, NOT bones -the myth "a shark can sense a drop of blood in an olympic sized swimming pool", not true. they could smell a drop of fish blood, not human blood...-the dorsal fin on a shark is bent backwards-sharks can have anywhere between 5-7 gills-sharks are attracted to flashy/bright/highly contrasting colors because they remind them of a fish-sharks can range from being able to hold them in your hand, to being over 60 feet long
Yes, sharks have a keen sense of smell and can detect blood in the water from miles away. Their ability to detect even tiny amounts of blood helps them locate potential prey.
Sharks are not mammals, and they do not drink blood.
Lemon sharks are a greyish bronze color on top and a creamy white under neath.
sharks can actually smell blood from almost a mile away
they are a light gray color
the sharks can smell blood 20-40 miles
sharks arwe atracted to human blood because of their scents of smell sharks have a very good sence of hearing and are predators just as a wolf needs to hunt sharks must also
Yes it does. Anytype of blood attracks sharks. Sharks can smell a single drop of blood from miles away. ~No. Not really. A few drips of human blood won't attract sharks unless the guy was bloodletting in the ocean. Sharks are attracted to fish blood. Def not any type of blood.. They are not interested in Menstrual blood,because it's dead cells... Human blood from a cut would need to be significant! They sense dying animal blood for sure!!
purple
Sharks do not seek out blood specifically as a food source, but they are attracted to the scent of blood in the water as it can signal the presence of injured or struggling prey. Sharks primarily rely on their keen sense of smell to locate potential food sources, and blood can act as a strong attractant for them.
Obviously..
hammerhead sharks can be found in warmer and tropical waters.
Blood