Great White Sharks are fish. The Great White Shark is a cold-blooded, aquatic animal with a cartiliginous skeleton, so it's considered a fish.
No-they're fish
No,sharks are not mammals.
No, whales are mammals and sharks are fish.
No, all sharks are fish.
Great white sharks are fish not mammals. Mammals are unique in that they have body hair, have three middle ear bones (the incus, malleus, and stapes), and nourish their young with milk from the female mammary glands. The great white shark has none of the above characteristics.
as reptiles
Great white sharks, hammerhead sharks, and bull sharks.
yes, because they are not underwater mammals so they have to be fish
It is unlikely for great white sharks to eat narwhals, as great white sharks typically feed on fish, seals, and other marine mammals. Narwhals are usually found in Arctic waters, while great white sharks prefer warmer and temperate waters, so their habitats do not overlap.
other sharks, marine mammals, seals, sea lions, fish, humans.
Sharks are cartilaginous fish. Cartilaginous fish receive oxygen from water via their gills, are cold blooded, and have a skeleton consisting of cartilage, rather than bone. Mammals receive oxygen from the air via lungs, are warm blooded, and have a skeleton made of bone. Mammals also are covered in hair, rather than the scales sharks have, and produce milk for their young. Sharks are not closely related to mammals via evolution, either.
No, Great White Sharks are carnivorous predators and primarily feed on marine mammals like seals, fish, and sometimes even other sharks. They do not eat seaweed as it does not provide them with the necessary nutrients and energy they need to survive.