No one has accurate answers to this question. Since the GW population is so migratory and also so isolated from one fish to the next, it is impossible to pick an animal and follow it. However, scientists studying GW's off the Farallon Islands (currently one of the hotbeds in the world for GW research) have identified by dorsal markings several individual animals and one, Stumpy, so named because she is missing the top portion of her caudal fin, has been observed returning to feed for 18 years. Is she an old shark? A young shark? No one can say for sure.
well tiger sharks live in water
first eggs second shark last adult
25 years
there is 1500 thing you can know about a shark (angel)
25 years
tiger sharks, bull sharks, and great whites
a bull, yes...a bull shark, no
YES!
a great white shark is bigger than a bull shark
5 years
the habitat of a bull shark is tropical seas
A Bull Shark can be as big as 12 feet.
there is more than one bull shark
A bull shark protects itself by biting.
a zambezi shark is also known as a bull shark. it is called a zambezi shark because they are found in the zambezi river