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Orcas hunt great white sharks – then eat only one part of the body
Orcas are not just strong predators – they are organized, intelligent killers with tactics that look almost military. They can ram great white sharks, flip them upside down, paralyze them, and eat ...
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Watch orcas flip a great white - then tear it apart in seconds
Orcas are often called the ocean’s real apex predators, and encounters with great whites show exactly why. In rare attacks, they can flip a shark upside down, trigger temporary paralysis, and leave it ...
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The great white shark’s fearsome reputation has been shaped in part by films like Jaws and Deep Blue Sea, which portray it as an unstoppable force of nature. Orcas, however, have earned their “killer ...
Killer whales work together in tightly coordinated pods to hunt some of the ocean’s most powerful predators, including sharks that dwarf them in size. These whales have mastered a surprisingly precise ...
While killer whales (Orcinus orca) can trigger the immediate departure of white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias), extended absences from their aggregation sites are also part of the sharks' natural ...
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