It is for camoflage. the top is grey so things looking down just see grey like water, and the bottom is white so things underneath see white like the sunlight in the water.
Great white shark. They are two times larger.
yesYes, but it looks more of a grey than white.
Grey on top, white on bottom
to my knowledge, the grey nurse shark lives on the east coast of Australia
It is naturally grey, which means it is already camoflaged
Tiger Shark Lemon Shark Great White Shark Whale Shark Basking Shark Megamouth Shark Grey Reef Shark Carribbean Reef Shark Black Tip Reef Shark White Tip Reef Shark Black Tip Shark Thats all poo poo!!
The shortfin mako is grey blue on top, with a white belly.
It depends on what kind it is some are grey with white are black dots some are blue, some are just plain white or grey. some of them also have more profound colours, such as dark green or yellow with spots.
A Grey Wolf's coat is a gray in the summer. In winter, the Grey Wolf sheds his/hers summer coat (which is gray). Underneath, their coat is white. This makes a Grey wolf's coat white. Grey wolves can also be black, brown, or red.
There are a number of sharks found in Australia. These include the Great White shark, the Whale shark, the Tiger shark, the Great Hammerhead shark, and the Grey Nurse.
The Gummy shark , the grey nurse shark and the sandbar shark location
They can't. The great white is much larger and stronger. The only way they can is if they hide in some cave too small for a great white shark to enter or something like that.