Issues that sharks have are, problem with eyesight, they cannot clean themselves, they cannot swim upside down, they can only stay on land for a short amount of time, and they cant blink.
Dreams do not provide information about lottery numbers. There is no numerical value to the image of sharks seen in dreams. Instead, the sharks in this stream represent issues that you are worried about.
I have a 260 L tank and have to rainbow sharks with 12 assorted cichlids and have not had any issues.
megalodon sharks, great white sharks, frilled sharks, thresher sharks, tiger sharks, sand tiger sharks, lemon sharks, bull sharks, whale sharks, basking sharks, lepord sharks,black tip sharks. there is 12.
Nurse Sharks, Lemon sharks and Hammerhead Sharks
Yes. Smaller reef sharks inside the reef and larger sharks in deeper waters outside the lagoon. Smaller varieties not generally dangerous - I have been in the water with sharks inside and outside the reefs and never any issues. There are Tiger sharks in the deeper waters around the islands and they can be dangerous. Don't swim at dawn or dusk or near a river mouth and your risk is almost nil - about the same as a lightning strike. Don't miss the beauty of these waters over a long shot like that.
Tina Anton has written: 'Sharks, Sharks, Sharks' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Sharks 'Sharks, Sharks, Sharks (Real Reading)'
There are three species of sharks known to eat starfish. These sharks are the Nurse sharks, Horn sharks and Port Jackson sharks.
Mako sharks, thresher sharks and Great white sharks
no! orcas are larger than most sharks some sharks are bigger like great white sharks,basking sharks,whale sharks and megamouth sharks
There are around 440 different species of sharks in the world (great white sharks, carpet sharks, hammerheads, whale sharks, tiger sharks, blue sharks, mako sharks, lemon sharks, angel sharks, thresher sharks, megamouth sharks, zebra sharks, nurse sharks, basking sharks, and bull sharks, just to name a few). And they all grow to different sizes. So, unless you specify what kind of shark(s) you're talking about, this question is far too general to be answered. See the Related Link below for the Wikipedia entry for sharks.
In the whale sharks family there are other whale sharks and other sharks
there sharks.