Quantcast

BIG FUCKING SHARK TERRORIZES AUSTRALIA

BIG FUCKING SHARK TERRORIZES AUSTRALIA

BIG FUCKING SHARK TERRORIZES AUSTRALIA

Travelers and locals in the Australian state of Queensland are caught in a real-life “Jaws” film after a MONSTER shark – perhaps measuring as long as 25 feet – was believed to have mauled another great white shark. As the picture shows, the smaller shark was bitten almost in two.

The image –showing a great white bitten in half– is causing a buzz on the Web. The violent shark-on-shark attack is raising fears along the Queensland coast. Authorities have warned swimmers to stay out of the waters around Stradbroke Island, a popular tourist destination for Australians, while the giant shark remains on the prowl.

“It certainly opened up my eyes. I mean the shark that was caught is a substantial shark in itself,” Jeff Krause of Queensland Fisheries told the Sydney Daily Telegraph.

In one swift bite the larger shark, estimated to be 5 feet longer than the fictional shark in the movie “Jaws,” apparently tore into the side of a 12-foot great white that had gotten tangled in netting near north Stradbroke Island.

“That cannibal thing is what great whites do. They’ll eat anything, including their own kind,” shark expert Hugh Edwards told Channel 7 News in Australia. “It would be sensible not to swim in that area for some little while because obviously the big shark has been there.”

The big bite is not settling well with the local surfers. “Whatever attacked and took chunks out of this big shark must be massive,” 19-year-old surfer Ashton Smith told the Courier Mail. “I’ve heard about the big one that’s lurking out there somewhere. We’re all being very, very cautious.”

About 500 feet from the shore, shark nets line the popular beaches of Queensland to protect swimmers from the violent sea predators. Environmentalists have complained the nets are taking the lives of migrating whales.

Australian Marine Conservation Society Director Darren Kindleysides told the Courier Mail that “recent figures on the number of sharks caught showed the nets were working but at huge cost to whales, dolphins and turtles.”

Shark hunter Vic Hislop also told the Courier Mail he “believes shark nets are too damaging to the overall marine environment, and that methods should be explored to scare away sharks rather than capture and kill them.”

Source: ABC World News

About Martin Brody
Chief Martin Brody is publisher and editor-in-chief of the Fear Beneath. He enjoys donating time to ocean conservation causes, educating the public about sharks, and remaining on solid ground.

Comments

  1. vadim2121 says:

    im want to swim there and bite those shark

  2. vadim2121 says:

    im want to swim there and bite those shark

  3. dru_down says:

    And also Sea World trainers.

    This was a larger White shark though. They routinely feed on other sharks, particularly if dead where the risk of injury is nil.

  4. Conrad says:

    Look at the bites on its sides. Definitly wasnt a killer whale.

  5. Surferdude says:

    it could have been a killer whale….. they attack great whites.

  6. stevedsa says:

    I thought being a surfer was all about taking risk; Its part of aussie culture…

  7. stevedsa says:

    I thought being a surfer was all about taking risk; Its part of aussie culture…

blog comments powered by Disqus