<img class = "expand-img-horiz" itemprop = "url" src = "https://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/d83c7f7fc51f77793056100acc0f641150c9083f/c=298-0-982-514/ local / – / media / 2018/07/03 / USATODAY / USATODAY / 636662113273518020-sharks.PNG? width = 534 & height = 401 & fit = crop "alt =" 636662113273518020-sharks.PNG "data-mycapture-src =" https: // www.gannett-cdn.com/media/2018/07/03/USATODAY/USATODAY/636662113273518020-sharks.PNG "data-mycapture- sm-src =" https://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm- /7687ba5860c74cb752b8a38aa989208e66caf1e4/r=500×200/local/-/media/2018/07/03/USATODAY/USATODAY/636662113273518020-sharks.PNG[19659012] Shark bites the woman's finger
(Photo: Melissa Brunning, Facebook) [19659012] An important lesson to remember: do not feed sharks by hand.
That's what Melissa Brunning – the woman tore from the back of a boat by a shark- Tawny mole in Dugong Bay, Western Australia after the shark finger – has to say. "The lesson of Life – Do not feed the sharks kids, "said Brunning in a Facebook post.
Brunning, 34, gave fish to a group of tawny sharks at the back of a boat when it was bitten and dragged into the water. water, according to the 7 News from Australia. She first thought that her finger had been bitten because of the immense pain, but despite the broken bone and the torn ligament, the finger remained intact.
In a video of the incident turned viral, Brunning is seen with his hand under the water holding a fish. In the blink of an eye, she screams in pain as the shark pulls her into the water. Then, friends immediately bring Brunning back on the boat.
"Please, let me assure you that this is not a shark attack, it's me who is doing a silly thing and that is suffering a consequence," he said. Brunny in a post. "Water is their domain … and we should appreciate them and admire them from afar."
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