By A Mystery Man Writer
Saving sharks - The Australian Museum
No Fishing Zone Leads to Highest Number of Gray Reef Sharks Ever Recorded
Blacknose Shark
Large marine protected areas effectively protect reef shark populations, Stanford scientists find
Overfishing, not climate change, is pushing some sharks to brink of extinction - The Boston Globe
Conservation implications of forage base requirements of a marine predator population at carrying capacity - ScienceDirect
Sharks once common in coral reefs are disappearing - The Washington Post
Global Study Finds Reef Sharks Now at a Higher Risk of Extinction, Research
Sharks Smithsonian Ocean
The changing tides: Why are sharks increasingly approaching our s
Research Shows New Ways the Fishing Industry Is Destroying Coral Reefs
Grey reef shark - Wikipedia
Shark depredation: An Easy Meal That's Hard to Digest
Are there sharks in the Chesapeake Bay?
Florida sees highest number of unprovoked shark attacks on Earth in 2022