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The biggest fish in the sea is as long as a school bus, weighs as much as 50,000 pounds, and has a mouth that looks, head-on, wide enough to suck down a small car. Despite this distinctive profile, scientists know very little about Rhincodon typus – the whale shark.

 

suck v. 以強大吸力吞沒 Rhincodon typus   鯨鯊
distinctive adj. 與眾不同的, 有特色的      

 

The behemoths are indeed sharks: they breathe through gills, like fish. They are cold-blooded, like fish. The “whale” part of the name refers to size and how the animals eat. They are one of only three known shark species that filter feed, as baleen whales do, swimming slowly through plankton-rich water, maws agape. Water goes in carrying edibles of all sizes, and water sans food flows out.

 

behemoth n. 巨獸   maw n. 動物的胃或咽喉
gill n.   agape adj. 張開著的
filter feed   濾食   edible n. 食品
baleen whale   須鯨   sans prep.
plankton n. 浮游生物        

 

The giant fish is hard to study in part because it is hard to find and track. By tagging individual specimens, scientists have learned that whale sharks can log thousands of miles in years-long trips. But they sometimes disappear for a spell. No one has ever found mating or birthing grounds.

 

in part   部分地   log v. 航行
track v. 追蹤   spell n. 一陣子
tag v. 加上標籤   mate v. (動物)交配

 

Whale sharks are ordinarily loners. But not in one corner of Indonesia. The photographs on these pages, shot some eight miles off the province of Papua, reveal a group of sharks that call on fishermen each day, zipping by one another, looking for handouts near the surface, and nosing the nets – a rare instance when the generally docile fish act, well, like the rest of the sharks.

 

loner n. (喜歡)單獨的人 handout n. 施捨物
reveal v. 揭露   nose v. 窺探
call on   短時間拜訪   instance n. 事例
zip v. 使快速有力地移動 docile adj. 溫順的

 

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