Sharks can swim in the oceans for 450 million years, long before the appearance of dinosaur, and have withstood cosmogenic changes in nature, however they begin to lose their teeth because of humans. The sharpening of the oceans that lead to reduced pH seawater damages the teeth of the sea predators, so they cannot be fed, which leads to death and if it extends to their extinction. Düsseldorf’s Heinrich Heine University, studying erosion in shark teeth, noted that they are becoming larger and more fragile, due to the exacerbation of the oceans caused by the increase in carbon dioxide produced by humans. “The sharks’ teeth, despite being made up of highly disorganized phosphates, are still vulnerable to erosion,” said Maximilian Baum, the first author of the study and biologist in HHU, wrote Interesting Engineering. According to experts, shark jaws have multiple rows […]
Source: News Beast

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