For six years, researchers watched the same bull sharks return to Shark Reef Marine Reserve in Fiji, and they kept noticing ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Six years of data from Fiji's Shark Reef reveal that bull sharks choose social partners, form bonds, and actively avoid certain ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Adult bull shark ‘Chunky’ (foreground) parallel swimming with subadult female ‘Lady Lazarus’ (background). However, these ...
Natasha D. Marosi among bull sharks. (Mike Neumann via SWNS) By Stephen Beech Sharks have "friends" who they prefer to socialize with, reveals new research. The apex predators of the ocean are often ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. If supporting conservation can be as simple as learning about individual sharks, sharing ...
Bull sharks may have a reputation as lone hunters, but new research reveals they actually form social bonds and even have preferred “friends.” After six years of observing 184 sharks in Fiji, ...
Bull sharks, it turns out, have friends. Scientists have increasingly recognized that sharks, once viewed as largely solitary creatures, have relatively complex social bonds. But studying those ...