Tiny sharks disguised as seals fool rescuers.

Naude and Denzil of Sea Protection Namibia safeguarded the harmed seals. One of them had a spike oddly standing out of its neck.

Around then, they assumed they were bits of wood or perhaps stingray spikes.

Notwithstanding, this experience assisted them in finding the real purpose for the spikes. Their thought process was a typical salvage offered them the responses they required.

It was a St. Joseph’s shark.
Also, it was all the while dangling from the neck of the seal.
The youthful male cape even had an entire fish still with him.

The St. Joseph shark, otherwise known as the Cape elephantfish, is a genuine delusion — an individual from a crude fish subclass that split off before large numbers of the qualities we partner with sharks arose.

It is neither a shark nor a tricky fish. The St. Joseph shark has a few outstandingly impossible-to-miss qualities and looks like the ratfish tracked down in the US.

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