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The answer to that is no. When sharks where first sited there was only coral, brain coral was not devopled then.
Well Firstly, the fish hide in the coral reefs to get away from sharks. However, the sharks know where the fish are and so visit the Reefs. When the sharks try to nose into the coral they find that they're too big to fit into it. But still, they persist and so end up squashing the coral.
Coral reefs house over 16 different breeds of reef sharks. In the Galapagos Islands, the hammerhead shark can be found among the reef life there. In the Maldives, over 16 different breeds of reef sharks, among them, hammerheads and whale sharks, can be found in this reef. Off th shores of San Diego, there are a variety of sharks there, among them, great whites, blue, and mako sharks. ~ Hexedgirl92
Sharks are cautious animals and generally avoid areas with a lot of obstacles like coral reefs that could potentially injure them. They prefer open waters where they can move freely and have access to their prey. Additionally, the structures of coral reefs are not ideal for their hunting strategies.
Angry Birds eat Coral Reefs.
Sharks and great white sharks Coral snakes thanks
Coral reef are too shallow for sharks to be in, the diving continues to break bits and peices of the coral reefs. If the diving continues the tiny fish are exposed to sharks eventually leading to the gradual overpopulaion of sharks and with no fish left to eat in the ocean that sharks die off. so stop diving today :)
Sharks, sea lions, otters, some whales, dolphins.. The list goes on and on.
Mostly because there is an abundant food supply on coral reefs.
fish
Coral and sharks.
phytoplankton, green sea turtle, manatees, and dugong