Uncommon film demonstrating a crocodile and a shark sharing a feast has been discovered by an automaton taking off the shoreline of Australia.
Jeremy Tucker shot the tiger sharks and colossal saltwater crocodile sustaining on the dead humpback whale body amid a seven-day trip off the Kimberley Coast.
In his staggering video the predators can be seen over and over gnawing the dead whale's flippers, tail and body and they both don't seem, by all accounts, to be concerned alternate species is eating as well.
The 55-year-old said it was just the second time in 30 years he had ever gone over creatures carrying on in such a way.
Jeremy, who is part proprietor and captain of the Great Escape sanction organization, stated: "We went over this dead humpback whale gliding topsy turvy – the reason for death obscure yet it had clearly been dead for some time as the odor on the downwind side was really appalling.
"As we chose it was justified regardless of a nearer investigation, we saw various tiger sharks bolstering on the corpse and also the saltwater crocodile.
"So I put the automaton noticeable all around and caught a couple of pictures and some recording.
"The zone that the whale was in is liable to 12 meter tides, so there are numerous crocodiles and tiger sharks there.
"We later on the arrival trip noticed the whale had cleaned up onto Montgomery reef and there was various crocodiles bolstering on the corpse.
"In a 30-year time of frequenting the Kimberley district I have just observed this once some time recently.
"That time there was a crocodile sunbathing over a dead whale while tiger sharks were nourishing on it in the meantime – yet sadly that was previously rambles."
Jeremy shot in September this year and detected the whale after the watercraft had quite recently left Montgomery Reef and heading towards the Prince Regent River.
He included: "Humpback whales visit the zone each year as this is as far north as they go up the West Australian drift.
"They typically calf and breed here and are here amongst June and September before coming back toward the South Pole Antarctic area."