| Awesome display as airborne Great White targets 'seal' for lunch... and  loses a tooth as it mercilessly chomps down on its prey 
 By Graham SmithAmazing images taken in the waters around Seal Island near Cape Town, South Africa
 
 This is the astonishing moment a Great White shark jumps out of the sea to catch its prey - and loses a tooth in the process.
 
 Nature's ultimate killing machine thought it  was about to enjoy a Cape fur seal for lunch, but instead chomped into a decoy used by a daredevil photographer patiently wanting to capture the perfect  shot.
 
 Unfortunately for the shark, it chomped down so viciously that one of its teeth broke off and ended up flying through the  air.
 
 
  No mercy: A Great White shark jumps out of the sea to catch its prey - and loses a tooth in the process
 
 
  Vicious: With his tooth still flying through the air,  the shark chomps down to take its prey beneath the waves
 
 The incident was  preserved by British  photographer Dan Callister, who regularly travels  to Seal Island near Cape  Town, South Africa.
 Speaking shortly before his latest visit, Mr Callister said: 'I’m looking forward to  meeting up with some old friends above  and below the water.
 
 'Hopefully the sharks will be on top form and  I  manage to get a usable frame or two, to add to the ongoing  project.'
 Seal Island is well known for the spectacular  way the sharks grab their prey.
 
 Coming up from underneath the waves, the  giant fish literally launch themselves out of the water with the seal in their  mouth.
 
 
  Jaws: The shark bit into a decoy seal used by a  daredevil photographer patiently wanting to capture the perfect shot
 
 
  Up close: British photographer Dan Callister, who  regularly travels to Seal Island near Cape Town, took these images
 
 
  Hungry: Seal Island is well known for the spectacular way the sharks grab their prey
 
 The area where the sharks circle the island  is known by locals as the 'Ring Of Death'.
 If the seals enter this circle on the sea  surface instead of in the murky water near the bed, they are almost certain to  be picked off by a speedy and aggressive Great White.
 
 Great whites come to the island to feed on  the 65,000 cape fur seals that live there.
 When the seals leave the island to go out to  sea to feed they gather at a shallow reef just off the island nicknamed the  launch-pad. They stay in a groups making it hard for a shark to target an  individual.
 
 However, the sharks cruise along the seabed  at the edge of the island where shallows drops off into deeper water. Targeting  lone stragglers or seals returning from a feed alone, great whites come from  below at great speed.
 
 Often the impact takes both the shark and  seal airborne.
 
 
  Success: Coming up from underneath the waves, the giant fish literally launch themselves out of the water with the seal in their mouth
 
 
  Predator: The area where the sharks circle Seal Island  is known by locals as the 'Ring Of Death' for seals
 
 
  Feeding frenzyL Great whites come to the island to eat some of the 65,000 cape fur seals that live there
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