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Some great Coral Reefs and a wide variety of sharks.
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
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.
Tiger sharks will usually live around coral reefs, and mostly they live in tropical areas.
Mostly because there is an abundant food supply on coral reefs.
hammer head and lemon shark
They do not, however they come to the reefs to be cleaned of parasites by the reef fish.
fish
In Curaçao, you can find several species of sharks, including the Caribbean reef shark, nurse shark, great hammerhead shark, and the blacktip reef shark. The Caribbean reef shark is commonly spotted around reefs, while nurse sharks are often found resting on the ocean floor. Great hammerheads can be seen during certain seasons, and blacktip reef sharks are known for their acrobatic behaviors near the surface. These sharks contribute to the diverse marine ecosystem surrounding the island.
Answer:I don't really think you should go snorkeling where there's sharks around! What you could do is try to swim away from the shark before it catches you. Cuddly sharksThere is a real effort in the world's great diving spots - ex. Great Barrier Reef - to develop a new attitude to sharks. I snorkeled there recently for several weeks, would see sharks often (white tipped, black tipped, nurse, etc) and they would just swim by and not pay any attention to me. Sure there are sharks that if hungry will go after a human, especially if it thinks the human is a seal, but in general sharks are not that big, not that hungry, not that interested. Sharks have a role on the reefs and killing them off (as we have - many harmless sharks are endangered) is killing the role, and that threatens the reef.
Nurse sharks can be found in the coastal waters off of Florida.
Because they pretect it from other fish who hurt it.