Heart stopping moment monster shark comes within two meters of a bikini-clad beach-goer wading in shallow water at a popular beach.<br /><br />Extraordinary video of Tiger shark cruising beside frightened beachgoers in WA.<br /><br />It was filmed twice, in very shallow water, then heading straight at a woman.<br /><br />Mullaloo Beach near Perth was closed due to Tiger shark sightings<br /><br />One shark lover claimed locals have taken to calling the shark 'Trevor' <br /><br />Alarming footage has emerged of a large Tiger shark gliding within meters of swimmers at a popular Australian beach.<br /><br />Two videos filmed on Monday show what appeared to be the same predator in the shallows between Whitfords Beach and Pinaroo Point, just north of Perth, in Western Australia.<br /><br />Startled beachgoers can be heard in the video screaming at the sight of it the shark so near to people.<br /><br />'It's a dolphin,' one surprised girl says. 'It's a Tiger shark,' someone else corrects her. <br /><br />Drone footage shows the shark head directly towards a woman before going around her at the last possible moment<br /><br />But with temperatures hitting the mid-30s, swimmers returned to the water in the afternoon and the shark was back - this time spotted by a drone camera.<br /><br />At first the animal glides directly towards an oblivious bikini-clad woman, then swims around her at the last possible moment.<br /><br />It then moves in between her and a nearby father, who unaware, beckons his young son towards him, before turning and heading back to deeper water.<br /><br />A self-confessed local shark lover, Toby, said in a social media post he went looking for the shark, which he nicknamed 'Trevor'.<br /><br />He claimed the woman in the clip saw the shark 'did the right thing by calmly getting out', but the father did not.<br /><br /> Drone footage shows the shark head directly towards a woman before going around her at the last possible moment<br /><br />Alarming footage has emerged of a large Tiger shark gliding within meters of swimmers at a popular Australian beach.