Ocean predators like Great White Sharks are huge. Some have grown over 20 feet, but the typical length is 15 feet.
Great White Sharks can bite above 4,000 PSI. Their powerful jaws and strong, serrated teeth help them to bite through thick skin, blubber, and bone, making them excellent hunters.
Great White Sharks protect marine ecosystems as apex predators. They maintain biodiversity by regulating species populations.
The sixth sense of Great White Sharks is electroreception. Their Lorenzini ampullae sense electromagnetic fields from other species' motions.
Great White Sharks hunt alone, although sometimes in couples or small groups. They travel large oceans alone to find nourishment.
The Great White Shark can swim 15 mph. They use their speed and force to startle their victim, often launching themselves out of the water during explosive breaches.
Very few fish are partially warm-blooded like Great White Sharks. This trait lets them hunt in cooler seas where their prey may not expect them by maintaining a body temperature slightly warmer than the water.