Advertisement.

EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site.
As a bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.
Click here to learn more.

Join Enchanted Learning
Site subscriptions last 12 months.
Click here for more information on site membership.
$20.00/year or other amount
(directly by Credit Card)
$20.00/year or other amount
(via PayPal)
$20.00/year or other amount
(for sending a check by mail)
$20.00/year or other amount
(for subscribing by school purchase order)
As a thank-you bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.
(Already a member? Click here.)

Zoom Sharks
SHARK ANATOMY
Tiger shark

SHARK DIET AND DRINKING

Sharks vary greatly in their diets, but they are all carnivores (meat-eaters). The method of obtaining the prey and the prey itself differ greatly among the different types of sharks.

Fast-moving hunters
Blue shark Many sharks (like the great white, blue shark, mako, tiger shark, and hammerhead) are swift, sleek predators that eat fish, squid, other sharks, and marine mammals (like sea lions, seals, and smaller whales).

Slow-moving hunters
Some bottom-dwelling (benthic) sharks (like the zebra horn shark, angel shark, and wobbegong) are slow-swimming predators that crush and eat shellfish (crabs and clams) from the ocean floor.

Filter Feeders
Some large sharks (like the whale shark, the basking shark and the megamouth shark) are filter feeders that sieve tiny bits of plankton and small animals from the water through their gills as they swim with wide-open mouths.
Do Sharks Drink Water?
Unlike bony marine fish, sharks don't drink water. The blood and tissues of sharks (and other cartilaginous fish) are extremely salty, containing high concentrations of urea, trimethalamine oxide, and other salts. Sharks and their relatives are slightly hyperosmotic to sea water (that is, sharks are even saltier than the sea).

Sharks absorb (pure) water from the sea by osmosis. Osmosis is a process in which water flows across a semi-permeable membrane from an area of higher concentration of water to an area of lower concentration of water, effectively moving to equalize concentrations. In the case of sharks vs. sea water, water flows from the sea water into the even-saltier shark via gill tissues.

This system makes most sharks unable to live in fresh water. The exceptions are bull sharks and some stingrays, which can lower their salt concentrations to enter fresh water.

Sharks can secrete any extra salts through the rectal gland.





Enchanted Learning®
Over 20,000 Web Pages.
Sample Pages for Prospective Subscribers

Overview of Site
What's New
Enchanted Learning Home
Monthly Activity Calendar
Books to Print
Site Index

K-3
Crafts
K-3 Themes
Little Explorers
Picture dictionary
PreK/K Activities
Rebus Rhymes
Stories
Writing
Cloze Activities
Essay Topics
Newspaper
Writing Activities
Parts of Speech

Fiction
The Test of Time
Biology
Animal Printouts
Biology Label Printouts
Biomes
Birds
Butterflies
Dinosaurs
Food Chain
Human Anatomy
Mammals
Plants
Rainforests
Sharks
Whales
Physical Sciences
Astronomy
The Earth
Geology
Hurricane
Landforms
Oceans
Tsunami
Volcano
Languages
Dutch
French
German
Italian
Japanese (Romaji)
Portuguese
Spanish
Swedish
Geography/History
Explorers
Flags
Geography
Inventors
US History

Other Topics
Art and Artists
Calendars
Crafts
Graphic Organizers
Label Me! Printouts
Math
Music

Click to read our Privacy Policy

E-mail Busy Little Brains
CD-ROM


Enchanted Learning Search

First search engine with spelling correction and pictures!
Search EnchantedLearning.com for all the words:
Enter one or more words, or a short phrase.
You can use an asterisk * as a wild-card.



Advertisement.



Advertisement.





Copyright ©1998-1999 Enchanted Learning Software