An Australian fisherman has just found a giant shark head offshore, sparking fears that there may be another super fish in the area.
Fisherman Jason sees a shark head in the waters off Sydney, Australia, on the morning of March 28, and is keen to know the fate of the shark's body.
Jason said this is the head of a mako shark. And the head alone weighed 100kg.
He posted a picture of a shark's head on Facebook and wrote a caption: "This is all that is left of a mako monster. Unfortunately, we have not seen anything that has eaten it, that animal. It's definitely impressive !! The head weighs about 100kg.
Mako sharks can be up to 3.8 m long and weigh up to 570 kg and they are the fastest sharks, swimming at a speed of 74 km / h.
An animal of this size certainly has been eaten by a much larger creature, possibly a great white shark with a length of up to 6.1 m.
Facebook users have their own hypothesis.
Aaron Smith wrote: "It looks like it was attacked by two sharks".
Meanwhile, Shamus Johnston thought that the "culprit" was a tiger shark: "The big tiger shark must have eaten mako!"
But Damien thinks differently: "It is probably not a shark eating it, perhaps a killer whale."
Fisherman Jason sees a shark head in the waters off Sydney, Australia, on the morning of March 28, and is keen to know the fate of the shark's body.
Jason said this is the head of a mako shark. And the head alone weighed 100kg.
He posted a picture of a shark's head on Facebook and wrote a caption: "This is all that is left of a mako monster. Unfortunately, we have not seen anything that has eaten it, that animal. It's definitely impressive !! The head weighs about 100kg.
Mako sharks can be up to 3.8 m long and weigh up to 570 kg and they are the fastest sharks, swimming at a speed of 74 km / h.
An animal of this size certainly has been eaten by a much larger creature, possibly a great white shark with a length of up to 6.1 m.
Facebook users have their own hypothesis.
Aaron Smith wrote: "It looks like it was attacked by two sharks".
Meanwhile, Shamus Johnston thought that the "culprit" was a tiger shark: "The big tiger shark must have eaten mako!"
But Damien thinks differently: "It is probably not a shark eating it, perhaps a killer whale."

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