Orca takes down a great white shark on camera

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Orca takes down a great white shark on camera


Images show a 60-year-old grandmother killer whale named Sophia battling with the shark in what scientists believe is the first time a single orca was captured on camera killing a great white shark.

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24 Comments

  1. What evidence do abc news have to link this to climate change? ABC should be ashame of themselve, it's very much like Putin blaming ukraine for the recent concert massacre in moscow.

  2. Climate change is a myth peddled by the elites to get us peasants to conform to their vision of the world and how we should live. If you plot out our planets atmospheric temperature over the course of it's life it has constantly been cycling from hot to cold and the global temperature is exactly where it's supposed to be at this point in time. Just do some research and learn for yourself and don't get brainwashed. Stop peddling this lie

  3. Interesting story so there is actually an Orca that has a chunk missing from her side and her fin, it's healed now and she is fine and still hunts perfectly well. They assumed it was a white shark as nothing else can even think of doing damage like that. Later they found a large female white shark with a huge deformation in her tail, i mean there is like a giant U where it should be straight. They theroised something like this happened but the shark managed to get a bite off and the whale used it's tail to smash into the shark and free themselves. When it's two same sized animals in a head on conflict none win but Orca are clever and will go for juveniles like this small white shark, they also tend to hunt in packs. The sad thing is they tend to only eat the soft tissues of creatures, certain organs for oils and the unguent and bottom jaw for baby whales. they are the wolves of the sea, deadly, large and smart and if they wanted too they would take down anything. But they are smart so they go for weak prey less likely to hurt them. I doubt any lone Orca would try this on a fully grown large female white shark as the risk of injury is too great.