TYPES OF SHARKS

To wrap it up, let's look at some of the types of sharks we've been discussing.

ANGEL SHARK: flat body like a stingray -- you can tell the shark is not a ray because the pectoral fins are not attached to the head.

They bury themselves in the sand or mud with only the eyes and part of the top of the body exposed.

They are bottom feeders, eating crustaceans like clams and mollusks and fish that are swimming close to the ocean floor

BASKING SHARK:

second largest shark (about 30 feet long and 8,000 pounds)

filters plankton from the water using "gill rakers"

BLACKTIP REEF SHARK (Carcharhinus melanopterus):

does well in captivity so is often found in aquariums (which is why we have so many photos of them)

grey with a black tip on its fins and white streak on its side

BLACKTIP SHARK (Carcharhinus limbatus):

Blacktip Sharks are different than Blacktip Reef Sharks (this confused me for quite some time)!

They are usually about 5 feet long although the longest on record was about 9 feet long.

during breeding season every February and March, around 10,000 congregate along the Florida coastline. It's like spring-break vacation for sharks!

BLUE SHARK: about 12 feet long.

sleek, tapered body

among the fastest swimming sharks and can even leap out of the water

diet consists mostly of squid, but it will eat almost anything

considered dangerous - have attacked people

BULL SHARK:

third most dangerous to people

can swim in salt and fresh water and have even been found in the Mississipi river.

COOKIECUTTER SHARK: a small shark (less than 2 feet long)

eats perfecty round chunks out of living whales and dolphins by clamping its teeth extremely sharp teeth onto them.

GOBLIN SHARK

very uncommon and likely the strangest looking shark (rarely seen the photos were actually taken in 1909)

pale, pinkish grey skin with a long pointed snout (it looks a bit like a sword on top of its head)

lives in very deep water.

found off the coast of Japan in 1898... until that time it was believed to have been extinct for 100 million years

GREAT WHITE SHARK:

more attacks on people than any other type.

averages 12 feet long and 3,000 pounds.

unlike most sharks, it can lift its head out of the water.

HAMMERHEAD SHARK:

unlikely to attack people, but considered dangerous due to its predatory nature and its size (10 to 20 feet)

eyes and nostrils are far apart, giving it a "hammerhead" appearance and allowing the shark to extend the range of its senses.

their favorite food is stingrays. Luckily for the sharks, they're immune to the stingray's venom.

MAKO SHARK:

fastest swimmer (43 miles per hour)

known to leap out of the water (sometimes into boats)

Nurse shark near Ambergris Caye, Belize -- photo by Joseph Thomas

NURSE SHARK:

bottom dwelling shark

thin, fleshy, whisker-like organs on the lower jaw in front of the nostrils that they use to touch and taste

hunt at night, sleep by day

common at aquariums

Port Jackson Shark, photo by Richard Ling, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

PORT JACKSON SHARK:

nocturnal

egg-laying

one of nine living species of bullheaded sharks

live near Port Jackson, Australia

They have very interesting spiral eggs that sometimes wash up on shore:

Sandtiger Shark, photo by Faris Algosaibi, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 SANDTIGER SHARK: the sandtiger shark has very pointed teeth -- the better to eat you with (if you're a fish!)

10 feet long

predator (carnivore)

nocturnal (hunts mostly at night)

Babies: The mother shark has two uterus. Many sharks begin in the uterus, but the strongest one in each uterus eats all the others before they are born.

SPINY DOGFISH SHARK:

the most abundant shark

3 to 4 feet long

slightly poisonous spines (not very harmful to people)

used by people for food and research.

THRESHER SHARK:

10 foot tail (1/2 as long as the body) which it uses to herd small fish

TIGER SHARK:

second most attacks on people

eat anything! (have been found with boat cushions and alarm clocks in their stomachs)

WHALE SHARK:

biggest shark and biggest fish

it isn't a whale (whales are mammals, not fish)

grow to 45 feet long and 30,000 pounds, but average about 25 feet long

filters plankton from the water using "gill rakers"



Photo by Yvonne

WHITE TIP REEF SHARK:

probably the most common shark encountered by divers and snorkelers on tropical reefs

about 3 feet long on average though it can be as big as 6 feet.

dark grey with a white tip on the first and sometimes on the second dorsal fin as well as the tail lobes

WOBBEGONG SHARK:

about 8 feet long, but virtually harmless.

lives in Australia and Pacific coastal reefs

lies on the bottom of the ocean waiting for fish to come near.

filters food into its mouth with worm-like projections on its head

razor-like teeth

yellow, brown and gray camouflage colouring.

ZEBRA SHARK: