Beautiful people swim with sharks
Photographers capture the memorable moments of two British supermodels diving into the sea and swimming with whale sharks.
Supermodel Hannah Fraser and whale shark
giants off Oslob, Philippines.
Hannah and her colleague Roberta Mancino dived about 5 meters deep
The world's largest fish - whale shark with a length of up to 12m.
Two photographers are Shawn Heinrichs and Kristian Schmidt
Diving for hours under the ocean to record images.
Whale sharks also known as whale shark live in the
Ocean in the warm and temperate zone of the world.
Whale shark mainly lives solitary and rarely sees swimming
herd. People believe that they migrate, but
experts still do not know how far they can migrate.
The elephant roughers eat all kinds of plankton, large algae
small or small inks and invertebrates.
Whale sharks are active predators. Follow those
sailors and whale shark gather at the reefs
off the coast of Belize (Caribbean), this is the place
Can supplement their regular food.
Set of photos with the purpose of calling people
protect whale sharks from extinction.
Whale sharks are not dangerous to humans. Divers can
Swim around this giant fish without any problems.
Like most other sharks, fertility behavior
The production of whale sharks remains unclear. Many people believe that fish
Elephant roughness reaches adulthood by about 30 years
and they have an estimated lifespan of 60-150 years.
- A bunch of photos of beauties playing with white sharks
- Video: 15,000 sharks on Florida waters
- What to do when you discover you're swimming with sharks?
- Beautiful butterfly wings
- Beautiful photo: The hunting spirit of ocean assassins
- New born sharks practice swimming according to their mother underwater
- Why don't you learn how to swim forever?
- Beautiful photos: Swim with the most terrifying predator in the ocean
- Video: 6 meters long white shark approaching the fishing boat on the Australian sea
- What if you fall into an area full of sharks?
- Scary people swim with big white sharks
- The fiends in the shark world