In this video I gently lift her nose so she doesn’t run into the boat, but as you can see she still bites the ladder to test it out. I LOVE this old Tiger Shark Queen Nikki (Ali’i Nikole) Large sharks will sometimes bite props and metal ladders or poles that conduct electricity into the water, usually its an investigatory checkout due to the attraction from the electro-receptive organ called the Ampuallae of Lorenzini, an initial check (bump or bite) or two and they usually stop. 'I saw a shark bumping some floating plastic so I rushed in and this was my greeting,' Ramsey joked about the encounter on Instagram. ![]() Rather than be startled, Ramsey laughs off the incident, quickly identifying the shark by name and continuing her dive to locate two other large, female sharks in the water. Ramsey quickly pulls herself back on the boat as the apex predator pops out of the water, attempting to take a bite of the researcher's flippers. Just as she's ready to drop in to help, the diver takes one last look into the choppy waters, with her face coming inches away from Queen Nikki, one of the area's most prominent tiger shark, the second-most dangerous sharks in the world. ![]() ![]() ![]() A diving expert narrowly avoided being chomped by a tiger shark just as she was preparing to enter the ocean off the coast of Haleiwa, Hawaii.Ĭameras captured the dramatic moment marine researcher Ocean Ramsey was about to dive into murky, shark infested waters on Wednesday in the island of Oahu after spotting a shark bumping into plastic pollution.
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