Main Content
-
Great White in New Zealand
Photograph by David Fleetham/Alamy
New Zealand fur seals swim warily above a great white shark, the largest predatory fish in the seas. Unfortunately for them, seals are one of these sharks' favorite meals.
-
Eye Level With a Great White
Photograph by Stephen Frink Collection
The Latin name for great white sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, literally means "ragged tooth," an understandable moniker.
-
Great White Breaching
Photograph by Brandon Cole Marine Photography/Alamy
Full breaches like this attack are rare, as they expend so much energy. But in South Africa waters full of baby seals, sharks attack from below with ferocious speed, propelling them out of the water with their catch.
-
Great White Shark on the Hunt
Photograph by David Fleetham/Alamy
Great white sharks, like this one, use an uncanny sense of smell combined with a unique sensory system that detects bioelectric impulses in the water to find vulnerable prey up to miles away.
-
Great White Above Fish
Photograph by DLILLC/Corbis
With the tip of its classic dorsal fin protruding through the water's surface, a great white shark swims above a school of fish that are most likely too small for the behemoth to bother chasing down for an afternoon snack.
-
Great White Shark Up Close
Photograph by Eric Hanauer/Alamy
Despite the widespread fear of these enormous predators, great white shark attacks are rarely fatal. Most of the attacks are "sample bites" from the curious fish as they try to decide whether to go through the effort of a full attack. Luckily, they usually decide against making people their next meal.
-
Great White Shark Lurks
Photograph by Raul Touzon
Great whites have a dark gray upper body to camouflage them from above and a stark white underbelly to camouflage them from below. That way they can ambush victims from any angle.
-
Great White Shark Breaches
Photograph by David Doubilet
Near a seal colony in South Africa, a great white shark breaches, leaping for a decoy being pulled across the surface.
Shark Features
-
All About Sharks
Sharks have prowled Earth's seas, essentially unchanged, for 400 million years. Learn more about these vital predators with facts, photos, video, and more.
-
Photos: Strange Deep-Sea Beasts
See a "prehistoric" shark, a hairy anglerfish, jellyfish glowing like Avatar extras, and more oddities of the Deep Australia Project.
Animals A-Z
Advertisement
Special Ad Section
-
School Contest
Enter your idea in the Find Your Footprint contest and your classroom and school could win big!
-
Vote Now
Over 14,000 photographs were submitted to the contest. Vote for your favorite finalists!
National Geographic Magazine
-
The Beauty of Insect Eggs
Engineered for survival, insect eggs hang on and hatch wherever their parents deposit them.
-
Eels Photo Gallery
The freshwater eel is one of the few fishes to spawn in the ocean and spend its adulthood in lakes, rivers, and estuaries.