They certainly did.
Megalodon Sharks.
prehistoric sharks eat whales, other sharks and mollusks. But the megalodon eats any kind of living organism
Sawfish eat numerous little fish.
Apparently, there is film of orcas taking out a Great White Shark...
The king of all sharks is the Megalodon.
sharks; fish
No. Megalodon reached 60 feet, whites only 23 maximum.
Sharks can not eat whale sharks as whale sharks are proportionally bigger than sharks. Sharks may scavenge off dead whale sharks but the probability of live whale sharks being eaten is highly unlikely. Some species of shark are cannibals and babies will often eat each other while inside the womb.______________________________________________________________________________Just a short note to remind whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) were contemporaneous with C. Megalodon, and in the same waters.That contributed for the whale shark to be included in the megalodon's menu although they have been extinct for millions of years.
Even though, the megalodon sharks were giant sharks, they were able to move at very fast speeds, but only for a short period of time.The Megalodon Shark swam about 25 to 35 mph.
The giant Megalodon
No, the only living relative of megalodon today is great white sharks.
No, the megalodon was not a great white shark; they are distinct species. Megalodon (Carcharocles megalodon) lived approximately 23 to 3.6 million years ago and is considered one of the largest predatory sharks to have ever existed. While both megalodon and great white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) belong to the same broader group of sharks, they are not directly ancestral to each other. Megalodon is believed to be more closely related to the ancestors of modern mako sharks.