I used to do shark fishing. We dumped "smelly stuff" into the water as an attractant. We rarely saw sharks in less than about 10 minutes.
- DoctorBeaver - 26th Sep 08
As a student in High School in Germany I asked my biology teacher that same question. She looked at me as if I was stupid and said something similar to: "just like in air, you dummy". She did not say dummy, she just thought that I should not be asking her questions she cannot answer well in class.
So, I still don't know. But it sure seems to be not plausible that the smell is traveling faster than through air.
Karsten
- Karsten - 4th Jan 09
if that is so is that why the shark attacks its prey knowing exactly where it is.
- jennie - 10th Dec 09
So i wouldn't want to bleed in the ocean?
-jenni 10th dec. 09
- jenni - 10th Dec 09
Hey Jen.
I'd say no. Don't bleed in the water in areas sharks frequent. You are not their natural prey so they'll think twice before attacking but then again A MEAL IS A MEAL and humans swimming breaststroke is in some ways similar to the way a wounded seal swims. Sharks are not known for their good eyesight and there's a reason shark attacks happen.
You shouldn't be afraid of sharks though, if you keep away from "hot spots" and use other methods of swimming than breaststroke you'll be fine. If by "bleed" you meant menstruation then you shouldn't swim in the oceans for other reasons!
I'm not 100% sure but I believe women are extremely sensitive to infections during menstruation and sea water is not exactly sterile...
note that I'm not 100% sure of anything in this post so you might want to doublecheck it. but I'd say .. 90% sure
- re: jennifer - 30th Dec 09
I went on this web site to know how sharks can smell blood in
think sharks sharks are very cleaver and can sence anathing under water
- SEAN - 4th Jan 10
i dont buy the idea that sharks can smell blood from sofar away, smell in water must move very slow as the water is so much more dense than air, and in air there is wind to carry the smells, there is no such thing in water..
Im sure sharks have another sense that we humans are not aware of and cannot comprehend, it could be somethig as simple as sharks being able to sense acidity levels, or feel electric currents in ewater or something of that nature.
The idea that sharks can smell blood is nonsense to me.
- Karim - 18th Jan 10
The sensitivity of sharks presents two puzzles (1) the concentration of blood reaching the shark is reputed tobe about one molecule in x-litres of sea-water ? How could the shark possibly detection the direction of the Source from a single molecule?
(2) The time required for the return trip source-to-shark plus shark-to-source is too short?
My Gordon Setter dogs could always locate the correct stone under sea-water which cannot be explained by our Physics ?
- Ken Green - 14th Aug 10
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