ADAM HANLON PHOTOGRAPHY

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  • Perfectly designed to seek and hunt its benthic prey, this great hammerhead's (Sphyrna mokarran) cephlafoil (or hammer) is packed full of amazing sensors. It's downward facing mounth allows it to strike as soon as the sensors find prey. Perhaps less obviously, hammerhaeds are amazingly maneouverable, allowing them to react in an instant to prey as they find it.
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  • A small schhol of schoolmasters (Lutjanus apodus) under the dive boat on San Salvador, Bahamas
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  • A tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) lowers its nictitating membrane to protect its eye as it gets close to the camera.<br />
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The nictitating membrane (from Latin nictare, to blink) is a transparent or translucent third eyelid that can be drawn across the eye for protection.
    See no evil
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  • A Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) patrols through the sunbeams at Tiger Beach, Grand Bahama. <br />
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Caribbean reef sharks are a species of requiem shark, belonging to the family Carcharhinidae and are found in the tropical waters of the western Atlantic Ocean from Florida to Brazil. They are the most commonly encountered reef shark in the Caribbean Sea.
    Reef shark patrol
  • A tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) "smiles" as it moves among the sun's rays at Tiger Beach, Grand Bahama.
    Tiger, tiger burning bright
  • A tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier), peers inquisitively into my dome port during the Wetpixel Tiger Sharks Expedition with Epic Diving. This amazing creature is equipped with an array of sensors in his nose, which can be seen in the image as the structures that look like pores. Included amongst these are the Ampullae of Lorenzini, which are electrical receptors, probably capable of picking up the electrical nerve impulses which make my heart beat.
    Nosy Tiger
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