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<blockquote data-quote="Tortoise Tom" data-source="post: 155031" data-attributes="member: 27883"><p>Sharks, fish, gators, spiders... Yep. All of them are pretty much working on instinctual responses to the world around them. There is still some individual "personality" though. Some gators are super tame while others are very aggressive. Same with sharks. There is a guy in the Farallon Islands that dives for urchins with a hookah rig. The same giant great white sharks come back the the region seasonally every year. He knows them all as individuals. Most of them just go about their business while he goes about his. There are a couple of them though that when he sees them, he gets out of the water.</p><p></p><p>Gray reef sharks in the Atlantic can be territorial and will do an exaggerated swimming threat display with their pectoral fins pointing downward to warn you off before tagging you. Same species in the Pacific, totally docile and not territorial at all. You can swim right up to them and they'll just move away.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tortoise Tom, post: 155031, member: 27883"] Sharks, fish, gators, spiders... Yep. All of them are pretty much working on instinctual responses to the world around them. There is still some individual "personality" though. Some gators are super tame while others are very aggressive. Same with sharks. There is a guy in the Farallon Islands that dives for urchins with a hookah rig. The same giant great white sharks come back the the region seasonally every year. He knows them all as individuals. Most of them just go about their business while he goes about his. There are a couple of them though that when he sees them, he gets out of the water. Gray reef sharks in the Atlantic can be territorial and will do an exaggerated swimming threat display with their pectoral fins pointing downward to warn you off before tagging you. Same species in the Pacific, totally docile and not territorial at all. You can swim right up to them and they'll just move away. [/QUOTE]
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