Product Description
Our Great White Shark Carabiner Clip Flashlight Our carabiner animal flashlights are the coolest way to make sure you always have a light nearby! Look at the shark's tail, it simply opens up to snap onto a key ring, backpack, belt, book bag, or anyplace else a person can hook something. The light is surprisingly bright for such a small flashlight! Keep one next to your bed, by the back door, inside your car, on your jacket, or on your bike. The light is bright enough to find things in the dark - such as finding the lock on your house or car door. Helps keep both kids and adults safe when unexpected scenarios come up. Just press the button on the shark's back, and you have light! Is there a better way to find the outhouse on a camping trip than to let our flashlight animals find the trail for you? Or what about lighting your way on Halloween? Fun for birthday parties, as stocking stuffers, or Hanukkah gifts for any age. Check out our other shark toys and gifts and our multi-style animal flashlights. If you have a teeeeeny little screwdriver, you can pop in a replacement battery. However, we've noticed that the lights last for quite a long time on the original battery.
The great white shark is a large lamniform shark found in coastal surface waters in all major oceans.Great white sharks are well know for their size and have been know to exceed 20 feet in length and 5,000 pounds in weight. A great white shark can reach maturity at about 15 years of age and can have a lifespan of over 30 years. Great white sharks live in almost all coastal and offshore waters, such as the warmer waters of the Pacific, the Caribbean, and along the coast of Africa, which have water temperatures between 12 and 24C (54 and 75F). Great white sharks are carnivorous, and prey upon fish, seals, sea otters, and seabirds to name a few. They have also been known to eat objects that they are unable to digest. These sharks prefer prey with a high content of energy-rich fat such as seals. Great white sharks have a well-earned reputation as ferocious predators. They like to ambush their prey, taking them by suprise from below. The great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) has a large conical-shaped snout, a gray dorsal fin and a mottled white underside. Great white sharks, like many other sharks, have rows of teeth behind the main ones, allowing any that break off to be rapidly replaced. A great white shark's teeth are serrated and when the shark bites it will shake its head side to side and the teeth will act as a saw and tear off large chunks of flesh. Great whites often swallow their own broken off teeth along with chunks of their prey's flesh.