Basking shark: Difference between revisions

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The Basking Shark lives in the coastal to pelagic in boreal warm-temperatures and insular shelves <ref name=sharkbio/>. These can be offshore as well as very close to land, sometimes just off the surf and even at the inlets of bays <ref name=sharkbio/>. They are known to live in deeper waters in lower latitudes  with a known range of 0-1870 ft in depth <ref name=sharkbio/>. They are normally seen in surface waters, but are primarily midwater inhabitants<ref name=sharkbio/>. They will surface when the water conditions and food conditions are favorable <ref name=sharkbio/>.
The Basking Shark lives in the coastal to pelagic in boreal warm-temperatures and insular shelves <ref name=sharkbio/>. These can be offshore as well as very close to land, sometimes just off the surf and even at the inlets of bays <ref name=sharkbio/>. They are known to live in deeper waters in lower latitudes  with a known range of 0-1870 ft in depth <ref name=sharkbio/>. They are normally seen in surface waters, but are primarily midwater inhabitants<ref name=sharkbio/>. They will surface when the water conditions and food conditions are favorable <ref name=sharkbio/>.


The are seen much more often in cooler temperatures in locations such as of both coasts of North America<ref name=sharkbio/>. The summer plankton blooms are at moderate to high levels in New Zeland waters doing summer and fall <ref name=sharkbio/>. This encourages sightings near the Cook Straight and Dunedin during summer and fall <ref name=sharkbio/>. They seem to migrate to higher latitudes in the summer and autumn while seeming to disappear during winter months <ref name=sharkbio/>. They seem to fair better to water temperatures in the range od 46-54 degree F. <ref name=sharkbio/>
They are seen much more often in cooler temperatures in locations such as of both coasts of North America<ref name=sharkbio/>. The summer plankton blooms are at moderate to high levels in New Zealand waters doing summer and fall <ref name=sharkbio/>. This encourages sightings near the Cook Straight and Dunedin during summer and fall <ref name=sharkbio/>. They seem to migrate to higher latitudes in the summer and autumn while seeming to disappear during winter months <ref name=sharkbio/>. They seem to fair better in water temperatures in the range od 46-54 degree F. <ref name=sharkbio/>


== Video ==
== Video ==
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