Whale Shark FACTS
WOW!!!!! You must have heard of the popular WHALE SHARK!! Here are facts about it.
Gentle giants, whale sharks filter-feed, swimming with their wide mouths open, collecting plankton and small fish.
Gentle giants, whale sharks filter-feed, swimming with their wide mouths open, collecting plankton and small fish.
Photograph by Brian J. Skerry
Map
Whale Shark Range
Fast Facts
- Type:
- Fish
- Diet:
- Carnivore
- Size:
- 18 to 32.8 ft (5.5 to 10 m)
- Weight:
- Average, 20.6 tons (18.7 tonnes)
- Group name:
- School
- Protection status:
- Threatened
- Did you know?
- The largest whale shark ever measured was 40 feet (12.2 meters) long; however, the species is thought to grow even bigger.
- Size relative to a bus:

The whale shark, like the world's second largest fish, the basking shark, is a filter feeder. In order to eat, the beast juts out its formidably sized jaws and passively filters everything in its path. The mechanism is theorized to be a technique called “cross-flow filtration,” similar to some bony fish and baleen whales.

Preferring warm waters, whale sharks populate all tropical seas. They are known to migrate every spring to the continental shelf of the central west coast of Australia. The coral spawning of the area's Ningaloo Reef provides the whale shark with an abundant supply of plankton.
Although massive, whale sharks are docile fish and sometimes allow swimmers to hitch a ride. They are currently listed as a vulnerable species; however, they continue to be hunted in parts of Asia, such as the Philippines.
0 comments: