Text by Tracy Scott Forson
Photographs selected by Donny Bajohr
Shark Week approaches. The Discovery Channel’s annual programming stunt begins July 7, and in anticipation, we’re celebrating a species that sparks both fantasy and fear for anyone who dares enter its habitat. From the Bahamas to Bora Bora, whether swimming alone or with an entourage, sleek and smooth or shaped like a hammer, sharks rarely disappoint when it comes to being camera-ready. Those toothy smiles don’t hurt.
Below, view a selection of the best images submitted by the Smithsonian magazine photography contest entrants over the years.
A reef shark makes a meal of a venomous lionfish in the waters of Grand Bahama. Lions may be kings of the jungle, but sharks are among the top predators of the seas.
Christopher Doherty, the Bahamas, 2012
Can a shark be aerodynamic? Like a rocket shooting up into the sky, aiming toward the sun, this blue shark near Pico Island in Portugal’s Azores archipelago rips through the water. Blue sharks’ average top speed is around 40 miles per hour.
Gilles Auroux, Portugal, 2020
Sharks, stingrays and blackwedged butterflyfish swim in clear, shallow waters in Bora Bora, French Polynesia.
Thomas Tsutsumoto, French Polynesia, 2010
The shark at the center of Jaws was a great white, but if a movie about this sand tiger shark were made, it should be called Teeth. Despite their chompers, sand tigers are very docile and tolerant of divers, which makes it easy to capture close images showing off their beautiful metallic skin.
Tanya Houppermans, North Carolina, 2015
Underneath tranquil blue waters, a shark with a toothy grin makes its way through a school of smaller fish.
Pam Wood, the Bahamas, 2009
A shark finds itself swimming in the midst of thousands of jellyfish, seemingly confident in their ability to sting away any threat from their visitor.
Annie Guttridge, the Bahamas, 2022
They say there’s safety in numbers. For divers, it may be for the best that these sharks are seemingly engaged with one another and not focused on dining on a photographer.
Thomas Pepper, the Bahamas, 2011
With the sun on the horizon, blacktip reef sharks circle in the shallow waters off Tetepare in the Solomon Islands.
Robin Moore, Solomon Islands, 2011
Like a flashlight illuminating a dark room, the sun’s rays pierce the water’s surface, lighting a path for a lone shark.
Matthew Potenski, the Bahamas, 2008
Although some shark species must remain in motion to intake oxygen from the sea, the whitetip is able to “sleep .”
Terry Goss, Mexico, 2013
The fin of a blacktip reef shark almost pierces the water’s surface in a clear, shallow lagoon in Bora Bora.
Ethan Daniels, French Polynesia, 2009
During a dive, seemingly curious bull sharks circle their visitors. Is it a welcome or a warning?
Gilles Auroux, Fiji, 2022
A school of gray reef sharks hunts at night with the aid of the scuba diver’s lights.
Mok Wai Hoe, French Polynesia, 2019
Living between two worlds, a shark just grazes the ocean’s surface, enjoying the sights above water while taking a sip of the sea.
Chris Fallows, South Africa, 2009
A diver encounters a majestic whale shark at the seafloor of the Maamigili Beru reefs, where the two share a moment of pure serenity, gliding together through the deep blue sea.
Thien Nguyen Ngoc, Maldives, 2023
The spots on whale sharks, the largest species of fish, may make them more difficult to see, but they also make the sharks easy to distinguish.
Ron Spilman, Belize, 2008
A possible threat lurks close to an unsuspecting pair of fish. Also, a shark contemplates whether it’s time for a snack. It’s all about perspective.
Craig O’Connell, the Bahamas, 2011
A shark encounters a smorgasbord of colorful fish among a rich reef of fan-shaped coral.
Franco Tulli, Indonesia, 2022
A group of whitetip reef sharks rests in a cave.
Suliman Alatiqi, Mexico, 2022
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