Nurse shark

Elasmobranch fish in the family Ginglymostomatidae

Nurse shark
Temporal range: 112–0 Ma
PreꞒ
O
S
D
C
P
T
J
K
Pg
N
Albian to Present[1]
Conservation status

Vulnerable (IUCN 3.1)[2]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Subdivision: Selachimorpha
Order: Orectolobiformes
Family: Ginglymostomatidae
Genus: Ginglymostoma
Species:
G. cirratum
Binomial name
Ginglymostoma cirratum
(Bonnaterre, 1788)
Range in blue

The nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) is an elasmobranch fish in the family Ginglymostomatidae. The conservation status of the nurse shark is globally assessed as Vulnerable in the IUCN List of Threatened Species.[2] They are considered to be a species of least concern in the United States and in The Bahamas, but considered to be near threatened in the western Atlantic Ocean because of their vulnerable status in South America and reported threats throughout many areas of Central America and the Caribbean.[2] They are directly targeted in some fisheries and considered by-catch in others.

Nurse sharks are an important species for shark research.[3] They are robust and able to tolerate capture, handling, and tagging extremely well.[4] As inoffensive as nurse sharks may appear, they are ranked fourth in documented shark bites on humans,[5] likely due to incautious behavior by divers on account of the nurse shark's calm, sedentary nature.

Taxonomy

The nurse shark genus Ginglymostoma is derived from Greek language meaning hinged mouth, whereas the species cirratum is derived from Latin meaning having curled ringlets. Based on morphological similarities, Ginglymostoma is believed to be the sister genus of Nebrius, with both being placed in a clade that also include species Pseudoginglymostoma brevicaudatum, Rhincodon typus, and Stegostoma fasciatum.[6]

Description

The nurse shark has two rounded dorsal fins, rounded pectoral fins, an elongated caudal fin, and a broad head.[7] Maximum adult length is currently documented as 3.08 m (10 ft 1+12 in), whereas past reports of 4.5 m (15 ft) and corresponding weights of up to 330 kg (730 lb) are likely to have been exaggerated.[2] Adult nurse sharks are brownish in color. Newly born nurse sharks have a spotted coloration which fades with age and are about 30 cm in length when nascent.

  • Head
    Head
  • Mouth
    Mouth
  • Jaws
    Jaws
  • Teeth
    Teeth
Nurse shark swimming
Nurse shark turning
Nurse shark swims near boat

Distribution and habitat

The nurse shark has a wide but patchy geographical distribution along tropical and subtropical coastal waters of the Eastern Atlantic, Western Atlantic, and Eastern Pacific.[8] In the Eastern Atlantic it ranges from Cape Verde to Gabon (accidental north to France).[2] In the Western Atlantic, including the Caribbean, it ranges from Rhode Island to southern Brazil,[9] and in the East Pacific from Baja California to Peru.[2]

Nurse sharks are a typically inshore bottom-dwelling species. Juveniles are mostly found on the bottom of shallow coral reefs, seagrass flats, and around mangrove islands, whereas older individuals typically reside in and around deeper reefs and rocky areas, where they tend to seek shelter in crevices and under ledges during the day and leave their shelter at night to feed on the seabed in shallower areas.[10]

Nurse sharks are also subject to piebaldism, a genetic condition that results in a partial lack of body pigmentation and results in a speckled body.[11]

Biology and ecology

Nurse sharks are opportunistic predators that feed primarily on small fish (e.g. stingrays) and some invertebrates (e.g. crustaceans, molluscs, tunicates).[10] They are typically solitary nocturnal animals, rifling through bottom sediments in search of food at night, but are often gregarious during the day forming large sedentary groups. Nurse sharks are obligate suction feeders capable of generating suction forces that are among the highest recorded for any aquatic vertebrate to date.[12][13] Although their small mouths may limit the size of prey, they can exhibit a suck-and-spit behavior and/or shake their head violently to reduce the size of food items.[14]

Nurse sharks are exceptionally sedentary unlike most other shark species.[15] Nurse sharks show strong site fidelity (typical of reef sharks), and it is one of the few shark species known to exhibit mating site fidelity,[16] as they will return to the same breeding grounds time and time again.

American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) and American crocodiles may occasionally prey on nurse sharks in some coastal habitats. Photographic evidence and historical accounts suggest that encounters between species are commonplace in their shared habitats.[17][18]

Reproduction

Nurse sharks are ovoviviparous, with fertilized eggs hatching inside the female. The mating cycle of nurse sharks is biennial, with females taking up to 18 months to produce a new batch of eggs. The mating season runs from late June to the end of July, with a gestation period of six months and a typical litter of 21–29 pups.[9] The young nurse sharks are born fully developed at about 30 cm long.

Nurse sharks engage in multiple paternity during mating season. A study conducted over a ten-year span found that a brood of nurse sharks had more genotypes than broods with one father. 14 separate genotypes were found in the brood examined, which suggests that more than one father fertilized the mother's eggs. Engagement in multiple paternity promotes genetic variation.[19]

See also

  • iconSharks portal

References

  1. ^ Sepkoski, J. (2002). "A compendium of fossil marine animal genera (Chondrichthyes entry)". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 364: 560.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Carlson, J.; Charvet, P.; Blanco-Parra, MP; Briones Bell-lloch, A.; Cardenosa, D.; Derrick, D.; Espinoza, E.; Herman, K.; Morales-Saldaña, J.M.; Naranjo-Elizondo, B.; Pérez Jiménez, J.C.; Schneider, E.V.C.; Simpson, N.J.; Talwar, B.S.; Pollom, R.; Pacoureau, N.; Dulvy, N.K. (2021). "Ginglymostoma cirratum". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2021: e.T144141186A3095153. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-1.RLTS.T144141186A3095153.en. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  3. ^ Osgood, G. J and J. K. Baum. (2015). "Reef sharks: recent advances in ecological understanding to inform conservation". Journal of Fisheries Biology. 87 (6): 1489–1523. doi:10.1111/jfb.12839. PMID 26709218.
  4. ^ Aucoin, S.; Weege, S.; Toebee, M.; Guertin, J.; Gorham, J.; Bresette, M. (2017). "A new underwater shark capture method used by divers to catch and release nurse sharks (Ginglymostoma cirratum)". Fishery Bulletin. 115 (4): 484–495. doi:10.7755/FB.115.4.5.
  5. ^ Ricci, J. A.; Vargas, C. R.; Singhal, D.; Lee, B. T. (2016). "Shark attack-related injuries: epidemiology and implications for plastic surgeons". Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery. 69 (1): 108–114. doi:10.1016/j.bjps.2015.08.029. PMID 26460789.
  6. ^ Goto, T. (2001). "Comparative Anatomy, Phylogeny and Cladistic Classification of the Order Orectolobiformes (Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii)". Memoirs of the Graduate School of Fisheries Science, Hokkaido University. 48 (1): 1–101.
  7. ^ McEachran, J.; Fechhelm, J.D. (1998). Fishes of the Gulf of Mexico, Vol. 1: Myxiniformes to Gasterosteiformes. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-292-75206-1. OCLC 38468784. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  8. ^ Compagno, L.J.V. (2002). Bullhead, mackerel and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes). Family Ginglymostomatidae. In: Sharks of the World: An Annotated and Illustrated Catalogue of Shark Species Known to Date, vol. 2. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. pp. 188–195.
  9. ^ a b Compagno, L.J.V. (1984). Sharks of the World: An Annotated and Illustrated Catalogue of Shark Species Known to Date. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. pp. 205–207, 555–561, 588.
  10. ^ a b Castro, J. I. (2000). "The biology of the nurse shark, Ginglymostoma cirratum, off the Florida east coast and the Bahama Islands)". Environmental Biology of Fishes. 58: 1–22. doi:10.1023/A:1007698017645. S2CID 32772305.
  11. ^ "Piebald nurse shark with incredible speckled skin may be first on record | Sharks | Earth Touch News". Earth Touch News Network. Retrieved 2023-03-16.
  12. ^ Tanaka, S. K. (1973). "Suction feeding by the nurse shark". Copeia. 1973 (3): 606–608. doi:10.2307/1443135. JSTOR 1443135.
  13. ^ Motta, P. J., Hueter, R. E., Tricas, T. C., Summers, A. P., Huber, D. R., Lowry, D., Mara, K. R., Matott, M. P., Whitenack, L. B., Wintzer, A.P. (2008). "Functional morphology of the feeding apparatus, feeding constraints, and suction performance in the nurse shark Ginglymostoma cirratum". Journal of Morphology. 269 (9): 1041–1055. doi:10.1002/jmor.10626. PMID 18473370. S2CID 15066259.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Motta, P. J. (2004). Prey capture behavior and feeding mechanics of elasmobranchs. In Biology of sharks and their relatives. CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 165–202.
  15. ^ Heithaus, M.R., Burkholder, D., Hueter, R. E., Heithaus, L. I., Prat Jr. H. L., Carrier, J. C. (2004). Reproductive biology of elasmobranchs. In: Biology of sharks and their relatives. CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 269–286.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Carrier, J. C., Pratt, H. L., Castro, J. I. (2004). "Spatial and temporal variation in shark communities of the lower Florida Keys and evidence for historical population declines". Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 64 (10): 1302–1313. doi:10.1139/f07-098.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Jason Bittel (20 September 2017). "Alligators Attack and Eat Sharks, Study Confirms". National Geographic. Archived from the original on September 20, 2017.
  18. ^ Nifong, James C.; Lowers, Russell H. (2017). "Reciprocal Intraguild Predation between Alligator mississippiensis (American Alligator) and Elasmobranchii in the Southeastern United States". Southeastern Naturalist. 16 (3): 383–396. doi:10.1656/058.016.0306. S2CID 90288005.
  19. ^ Saville, Kenneth J.; Lindley, Andrea M.; Maries, Eleanora G.; Carrier, Jeffrey C.; Pratt, Harold L. (2002-03-01). "Multiple Paternity in the Nurse Shark, Ginglymostoma Cirratum". Environmental Biology of Fishes. 63 (3): 347–351. doi:10.1023/A:1014369011709. ISSN 1573-5133. S2CID 22777142.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ginglymostoma cirratum.
  • Photos of Ginglymostoma cirratum on Sealife Collection
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Extant shark species
Order Carcharhiniformes (Ground sharks)
Hemigaleidae
(Weasel sharks)
Hemipristis
  • Snaggletooth shark (H. elongata)
Chaenogaleus
  • Hooktooth shark (C. macrostoma)
Hemigaleus
  • Australian weasel shark (H. australiensis)
  • Sicklefin weasel shark (H. microstoma)
Paragaleus
  • Whitetip weasel shark (P. leucolomatus)
  • Atlantic weasel shark (P. pectoralis)
  • Slender weasel shark (P. randalli)
  • Straight-tooth weasel shark (P. tengi)
Leptochariidae
Leptocharias
  • Barbeled houndshark (L. smithii)
Proscylliidae
(Finback sharks)
Ctenacis
  • Harlequin catshark (C. fehlmanni)
Eridacnis
  • Cuban ribbontail catshark (E. barbouri)
  • Pygmy ribbontail catshark (E. radcliffei)
  • African ribbontail catshark (E. sinuans)
Proscyllium
  • Graceful catshark (P. habereri)
  • P. venustum
Pseudotriakidae
Gollum
  • Slender smooth-hound (G. attenuatus)
Pseudotriakis
  • False catshark (P. microdon)
Sphyrnidae
(Hammerhead sharks)
Eusphyra
  • Winghead shark (E. blochii)
Sphyrna
  • Scalloped bonnethead (S. corona)
  • Whitefin hammerhead (S. couardi)
  • Scalloped hammerhead (S. lewini)
  • Scoophead (S. media)
  • Great hammerhead (S. mokarran)
  • Bonnethead (S. tiburo)
  • Smalleye hammerhead (S. tudes)
  • Smooth hammerhead (S. zygaena)
Triakidae
(Houndsharks)
Furgaleus
  • Whiskery shark (F. macki)
Galeorhinus
  • School shark (G. galeus)
Gogolia
  • Sailback houndshark (G. filewoodi)
Hemitriakis
  • Deepwater sicklefin hound shark (H. abdita)
  • Sicklefin hound shark (H. falcata)
  • Japanese topeshark (H. japanica)
  • Whitefin topeshark (H. leucoperiptera)
  • Ocellate topeshark (Hemitriakis Sp.A)
Hypogaleus
  • Blacktip tope (H. hyugaensis)
Iago
  • Longnose houndshark (I. garricki)
  • Bigeye houndshark (I. omanensis)
  • Lowfin houndshark (Iago Sp.A)
Mustelus
(Smooth-hounds)
  • M. albipinnis
  • Gummy shark (M. antarcticus)
  • Starry smooth-hound (M. asterias)
  • Gray smooth-hound (M. californicus)
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  • Sharptooth smooth-hound (M. dorsalis)
  • Striped smooth-hound (M. fasciatus)
  • Spotless smooth-hound (M. griseus)
  • Brown smooth-hound (M. henlei)
  • Smalleye smooth-hound (M. higmani)
  • Spotted estuary smooth-hound (M. lenticulatus)
  • Sicklefin smooth-hound (M. lunulatus)
  • Starspotted smooth-hound (M. manazo)
  • Speckled smooth-hound (M. mento)
  • M. minicanis
  • Arabian smooth-hound (M. mosis)
  • Common smooth-hound (M. mustelus)
  • Narrowfin smooth-hound (M. norrisi)
  • Whitespotted smooth-hound (M. palumbes)
  • Blackspotted smooth-hound (M. punctulatus)
  • M. ravidus
  • Narrownose smooth-hound (M. schmitti)
  • Gulf smoothhound (M. sinusmexicanus)
  • Humpback smooth-hound (M. whitneyi)
  • M. widodoi
Scylliogaleus
  • Flapnose houndshark (S. quecketti)
Triakis
  • Sharpfin houndshark (T. acutipinna)
  • Spotted houndshark (T. maculata)
  • Sharptooth houndshark (T. megalopterus)
  • Banded houndshark (T. scyllium)
  • Leopard shark (T. semifasciata)
Carcharhinidae
  • Large family listed below
Scyliorhinidae
  • Large family listed below
Family Carcharhinidae (Requiem sharks)
Carcharhinus
  • Blacknose shark (C. acronotus)
  • Silvertip shark (C. albimarginatus)
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  • Graceful shark (C. amblyrhynchoides)
  • Grey reef shark (C. amblyrhynchos)
  • Pigeye shark (C. amboinensis)
  • Borneo shark (C. borneensis)
  • Copper shark (C. brachyurus)
  • Spinner shark (C. brevipinna)
  • Nervous shark (C. cautus)
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  • Silky shark (C. falciformis)
  • Creek whaler (C. fitzroyensis)
  • Galapagos shark (C. galapagenisis)
  • Pondicherry shark (C. hemiodon)
  • Finetooth shark (C. isodon)
  • Smoothtooth blacktip shark (C. leiodon)
  • Bull shark (C. leucas)
  • Blacktip shark (C. limbatus)
  • Oceanic whitetip shark (C. longimanus)
  • Hardnose shark (C. macloti)
  • Blacktip reef shark (C. melanopterus)
  • Dusky shark (C. obscurus)
  • Caribbean reef shark (C. perezii)
  • Sandbar shark (C. plumbeus)
  • Smalltail shark (C. porosus)
  • Blackspot shark (C. sealei)
  • Night shark (C. signatus)
  • Spottail shark (C. sorrah)
  • Australian blacktip shark (C. tilstoni)
Galeocerdo
  • Tiger shark (G. cuvier)
Glyphis
(River sharks)
  • Ganges shark (G. gangeticus)
  • Northern river shark (G. garricki)
  • Speartooth shark (G. glyphis)
  • Irrawaddy river shark (G. siamensis)
  • Borneo river shark (Glyphis sp. B)
Isogomphodon
  • Daggernose shark (I. oxyrhynchus)
Lamiopsis
  • Broadfin shark (L. temminckii)
Loxodon
  • Sliteye shark (L. macrorhinus)
Nasolamia
  • Whitenose shark (N. velox)
Negaprion
  • Sicklefin lemon shark (N. acutidens)
  • Lemon shark (N. brevirostris)
Prionace
  • Blue shark (P. glauca)
Rhizoprionodon
  • Milk shark (R. acutus)
  • Brazilian sharpnose shark (R. lalandii)
  • Pacific sharpnose shark (R. longurio)
  • Grey sharpnose shark (R. oligolinx)
  • Caribbean sharpnose shark (R. porosus)
  • Australian sharpnose shark (R. taylori)
  • Atlantic sharpnose shark (R. terraenovae)
Scoliodon
  • Spadenose shark (S. laticaudus)
Triaenodon
  • Whitetip reef shark (T. obesus)
Family Scyliorhinidae (Catsharks)
Apristurus
  • Flatnose cat shark (A. acanutus)
  • A. albisoma
  • A. aphyodes
  • Atlantic ghost catshark (A. atlanticus)
  • Brown catshark (A. brunneus)
  • Hoary catshark (A. canutus)
  • Flaccid catshark (A. exsanguis)
  • A. fedorovi
  • Humpback cat shark (A. gibbosus)
  • Longfin catshark (A. herklotsi)
  • Smallbelly catshark (A. indicus)
  • A. internatus
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  • Japanese catshark (A. japonicus)
  • Longnose catshark (A. kampae)
  • Iceland catshark (A. laurussonii)
  • Longhead catshark (A. longicephalus)
  • Flathead catshark (A. macrorhynchus)
  • Broadmouth cat shark (A. macrostomus)
  • Ghost catshark (A. manis)
  • Black roughscale catshark (A. melanoasper)
  • Smalleye catshark (A. microps)
  • Smalldorsal cat shark (A. micropterygeus)
  • Largenose catshark (A. nasutus)
  • Smallfin catshark (A. parvipinnis)
  • A. pinguis
  • Spatulasnout catshark (A. platyrhynchus)
  • Deepwater catshark (A. profundorum)
  • Broadgill catshark (A. riveri)
  • Saldanha catshark (A. saldanha)
  • Pale catshark (A. sibogae)
  • South China catshark (A. sinensis)
  • Spongehead catshark (A. spongiceps)
  • Panama ghost catshark (A. stenseni)
Asymbolus
  • Australian spotted catshark (A. analis)
  • A. funebris
  • Western spotted catshark (A. occiduus)
  • Pale spotted catshark (A. pallidus)
  • A. parvus
  • A. rubiginosus
  • Variegated catshark (A. submaculatus)
  • Gulf catshark (A. vincenti)
Atelomycterus
  • A. baliensis
  • Banded sand catshark (A. fasciatus)
  • Australian marbled catshark (A. macleayi)
  • Coral catshark (A. marmoratus)
Aulohalaelurus
  • New Caledonia catshark (A. kanakorum)
  • Australian blackspotted catshark (A. labiosus)
Cephaloscyllium
  • Whitefin swellshark (C. albipinnum)
  • Circle-blotch pygmy swellshark (C. circulopullum)
  • Cook's swellshark (C. cooki)
  • Reticulated swellshark (C. fasciatum)
  • Formosa swellshark (C. formosanum)
  • Australian reticulate swellshark (C. hicosellum)
  • Draughtsboard shark (C. isabellum)
  • Australian swellshark (C. laticeps)
  • Spotted swellshark (C. maculatum)
  • Leopard-spotted swellshark (C. pardelotum)
  • Painted swellshark (C. pictum)
  • Sarawak pygmy swellshark (C. sarawakensis)
  • Flagtail swellshark (C. signourum)
  • Indian swellshark (C. silasi)
  • Speckled swellshark (C. speccum)
  • Balloon shark (C. sufflans)
  • Blotchy swellshark (C. umbratile)
  • Saddled swellshark (C. variegatum)
  • Swellshark (C. ventriosum)
  • Narrowbar swellshark (C. zebrum)
Cephalurus
  • Lollipop catshark (C. cephalus)
Figaro
  • Australian sawtail catshark (F. boardmani)
  • Northern sawtail catshark (F. striatus)
Galeus
  • Antilles catshark (G. antillensis)
  • Roughtail catshark (G. arae)
  • Atlantic sawtail cat shark (G. atlanticus)
  • Longfin sawtail cat shark (G. cadenati)
  • Gecko catshark (G. eastmani)
  • Slender sawtail catshark (G. gracilis)
  • Longnose sawtail cat shark (G. longirostris)
  • Blackmouth catshark (G. melastomus)
  • Southern sawtail catshark (G. mincaronei)
  • Mouse catshark (G. murinus)
  • Broadfin sawtail catshark (G. nipponensis)
  • Peppered catshark (G. piperatus)
  • African sawtail catshark (G. polli)
  • G. priapus
  • Blacktip sawtail catshark (G. sauteri)
  • Dwarf sawtail catshark (G. schultzi)
  • Springer's sawtail cat shark (G. springeri)
Halaelurus
  • Arabian catshark (H. alcockii)
  • Speckled catshark (H. boesemani)
  • Blackspotted catshark (H. buergeri)
  • Dusky catshark (H. canescens)
  • Broadhead cat shark (H. clevai)
  • New Zealand catshark (H. dawsoni)
  • Bristly catshark (H. hispidus)
  • Spotless catshark (H. immaculatus)
  • Lined catshark (H. lineatus)
  • Mud catshark (H. lutarius)
  • Tiger catshark (H. natalensis)
  • Quagga catshark (H. quagga)
Haploblepharus
  • Puffadder shyshark (H. edwardsii)
  • Brown shyshark (H. fuscus)
  • Natal shyshark (H. kistnasamyi)
  • Dark shyshark (H. pictus)
Holohalaelurus
  • H. favus
  • H. grennian
  • Crying izak (H. melanostigma)
  • African spotted catshark (H. punctatus)
  • Izak catshark (H. regani)
Parmaturus
  • White-tip catshark (P. albimarginatus)
  • White-clasper catshark (P. albipenis)
  • Beige catshark (P. bigus)
  • Campeche catshark (P. campechiensis)
  • Velvet catshark (P. lanatus)
  • McMillan's catshark (P. macmillani)
  • Blackgill catshark (P. melanobranchus)
  • Salamander shark (P. pilosus)
  • Filetail catshark (P. xaniurus)
  • Shorttail catshark (Parmaturus sp. A)
Pentanchus
  • Onefin catshark (P. profundicolus)
Poroderma
  • Pyjama catshark (P. africanum)
  • Leopard catshark (P. pantherinum)
Schroederichthys
  • Narrowmouthed catshark (S. bivius)
  • Redspotted catshark (S. chilensis)
  • Narrowtail catshark (S. maculatus)
  • Lizard catshark (S. saurisqualus)
  • Slender catshark (S. tenuis)
Scyliorhinus
  • Polkadot catshark (S. besnardi)
  • Boa catshark (S. boa)
  • Small-spotted catshark (S. canicula)
  • Yellowspotted catshark (S. capensis)
  • West African catshark (S. cervigoni)
  • Comoro cat shark (S. comoroensis)
  • Brownspotted catshark (S. garmani)
  • Freckled catshark (S. haeckelii)
  • Whitesaddled catshark (S. hesperius)
  • Blotched catshark (S. meadi)
  • Chain catshark (S. retifer)
  • Nursehound (S. stellaris)
  • Izu cat shark (S. tokubee)
  • Cloudy catshark (S. torazame)
  • Dwarf catshark (S. torrei)
Order Echinorhiniformes (Bramble sharks)
Echinorhinidae
Echinorhinus
  • Bramble shark (E. brucus)
  • Prickly shark (E. cookei)
Order Heterodontiformes (Bullhead sharks)
Heterodontidae
Heterodontus
  • Horn shark (H. francisci)
  • Crested bullhead shark (H. galeatus)
  • Japanese bullhead shark (H. japonicus)
  • Mexican hornshark (H. mexicanus)
  • Oman bullhead shark (H. omanensis)
  • Port Jackson shark (H. portusjacksoni)
  • Galapagos bullhead shark (H. quoyi)
  • Whitespotted bullhead shark (H. ramalheira)
  • Zebra bullhead shark (H. zebra)
Chlamydoselachidae
Chlamydoselachus
  • Frilled shark (C. anguineus)
  • Southern African frilled shark (C. africana)
Hexanchidae
(Cow sharks)
Heptranchias
  • Sharpnose sevengill shark (H. perlo)
Hexanchus
  • Bluntnose sixgill shark (H. griseus)
  • Bigeyed sixgill shark (H. nakamurai)
Notorynchus
  • Broadnose sevengill shark (N. cepedianus)
Order Lamniformes (Mackerel sharks)
Alopiidae
Alopias
(Thresher sharks)
  • Pelagic thresher (A. pelagicus)
  • Bigeye thresher (A. superciliosus)
  • Common thresher (A. vulpinus)
  • Alopias sp. (A. sp.)
Cetorhinidae
Cetorhinus
  • Basking shark (C. maximus)
Lamnidae
Carcharodon
  • Great white shark (C. carcharias)
Isurus
  • Shortfin mako shark (I. oxyrinchus)
  • Longfin mako shark (I. paucus)
Lamna
  • Salmon shark (L. ditropis)
  • Porbeagle (L. nasus)
Megachasmidae
Megachasma
  • Megamouth shark (M. pelagios)
Mitsukurinidae
Mitsukurina
  • Goblin shark (M. owstoni)
Odontaspididae
Carcharias
  • Grey nurse shark (C. taurus)
  • Indian sand tiger (C. tricuspidatus)
Odontaspis
  • Smalltooth sand tiger (O. ferox)
  • Bigeye sand tiger (O. noronhai)
Pseudocarchariidae
Pseudocarcharias
  • Crocodile shark (P. kamoharai)
Order Orectolobiformes (Carpet sharks)
Brachaeluridae
Brachaelurus
  • Blind shark (B. waddi)
Heteroscyllium
  • Bluegrey carpetshark (H. colcloughi)
Ginglymostomatidae
(Nurse sharks)
Ginglymostoma
  • Nurse shark (G. cirratum)
Nebrius
  • Tawny nurse shark (N. ferrugineus)
Pseudoginglymostoma
  • Short-tail nurse shark (P. brevicaudatum)
Hemiscylliidae
(Bamboo sharks)
Chiloscyllium
  • Arabian carpetshark (C. arabicum)
  • Burmese bamboo shark (C. burmensis)
  • Bluespotted bamboo shark (C. caerulopunctatum)
  • Grey bamboo shark (C. griseum)
  • Hasselt's bamboo shark (C. hasseltii)
  • Slender bamboo shark (C. indicum)
  • Whitespotted bamboo shark (C. plagiosum)
  • Brownbanded bamboo shark (C. punctatum)
Hemiscyllium
  • Indonesian speckled carpetshark (H. freycineti)
  • H. galei
  • Papuan epaulette shark (H. hallstromi)
  • H. henryi
  • Epaulette shark (H. ocellatum)
  • Hooded carpetshark (H. strahani)
  • Speckled carpetshark (H. trispeculare)
Orectolobidae
(Wobbegongs)
Eucrossorhinus
  • Tasselled wobbegong (E. dasypogon)
Orectolobus
  • Floral banded wobbegong (O. floridus)
  • Banded wobbegong (O. halei)
  • Western wobbegong (O. hutchinsi)
  • Japanese wobbegong (O. japonicus)
  • Spotted wobbegong (O. maculatus)
  • Ornate wobbegong (O. ornatus)
  • Dwarf spotted wobbegong (O. parvimaculatus)
  • Network wobbegong (O. reticulatus)
  • Northern wobbegong (O. wardi)
Sutorectus
  • Cobbler wobbegong (S. tentaculatus)
Parascylliidae
(Collared carpet sharks)
Cirrhoscyllium
  • Barbelthroat carpetshark (C. expolitum)
  • Taiwan saddled carpetshark (C. formosanum)
  • Saddle carpetshark (C. japonicum)
Parascyllium
  • Collared carpetshark (P. collare)
  • Rusty carpetshark (P. ferrugineum)
  • Ginger carpetshark (P. sparsimaculatum)
  • Necklace carpetshark (P. variolatum)
Rhincodontidae
Rhincodon
  • Whale shark (R. typus)
Stegostomatidae
Stegostoma
  • Zebra shark (S. fasciatum)
Order Pristiophoriformes (Sawsharks)
Pristiophoridae
Pliotrema
  • Sixgill sawshark (P. warreni)
Pristiophorus
  • Longnose sawshark (P. cirratus)
  • Tropical sawshark (P. delicatus)
  • Japanese sawshark (P. japonicus)
  • Shortnose sawshark (P. nudipinnis)
  • Bahamas sawshark (P. schroederi)
  • Eastern Australian sawshark (Pristiophorus peroniensis)
  • Philippine sawshark (Pristiophorus sp. C)
  • Dwarf sawshark (Pristiophorus sp. D)
Centrophoridae
(Gulper sharks)
Centrophorus
  • Needle dogfish (C. acus)
  • Dwarf gulper shark (C. atromarginatus)
  • Gulper shark (C. granulosus)
  • Dumb gulper shark (C. harrissoni)
  • Blackfin gulper shark (C. isodon)
  • Lowfin gulper shark (C. lusitanicus)
  • Smallfin gulper shark (C. moluccensis)
  • Taiwan gulper shark (C. niaukang)
  • Leafscale gulper shark (C. squamosus)
  • Mosaic gulper shark (C. tessellatus)
  • Little gulper shark (C. uyato)
Deania
  • Birdbeak dogfish (D. calcea)
  • Rough longnose dogfish (D. hystricosa)
  • Arrowhead dogfish (D. profundorum)
  • Longsnout dogfish (D. quadrispinosum)
Dalatiidae
Euprotomicroides
  • Taillight shark (E. zantedeschia)
Heteroscymnoides
  • Longnose pygmy shark (H. marleyi)
Mollisquama
  • Pocket shark (M. parini)
Dalatias
  • Kitefin shark (D. licha)
Isistius
  • Cookiecutter shark (I. brasiliensis)
  • South China cookiecutter shark (I. labialis)
  • Largetooth cookiecutter shark (I. plutodus)
Euprotomicrus
  • Pygmy shark (E. bispinatus)
Squaliolus
  • Smalleye pygmy shark (S. aliae)
  • Spined pygmy shark (S. laticaudus)
Etmopteridae
Aculeola
  • Hooktooth dogfish (A. nigra)
Centroscyllium
  • Highfin dogfish (C. excelsum)
  • Black dogfish (C. fabricii)
  • Granular dogfish (C. granulatum)
  • Bareskin dogfish (C. kamoharai)
  • Combtooth dogfish (C. nigrum)
  • Ornate dogfish (C. ornatum)
  • Whitefin dogfish (C. ritteri)
Etmopterus
(Lantern sharks)
  • New Zealand lanternshark (E. baxteri)
  • Blurred lanternshark (E. bigelowi)
  • Shorttail lanternshark (E. brachyurus)
  • Lined lanternshark (E. bullisi)
  • E. burgessi
  • Cylindrical lanternshark (E. carteri)
  • Tailspot lanternshark (E. caudistigmus)
  • Combtooth lanternshark (E. decacuspidatus)
  • Pink lanternshark (E. dianthus)
  • E. dislineatus
  • Blackmouth lanternshark (E. evansi)
  • Pygmy lanternshark (E. fusus)
  • Broadbanded lanternshark (E. gracilispinis)
  • Southern lanternshark (E. granulosus)
  • Caribbean lanternshark (E. hillianus)
  • Smalleye lantern shark (E. litvinovi)
  • Blackbelly lanternshark (E. lucifer)
  • Slendertail lanternshark (E. molleri)
  • Dwarf lanternshark (E. perryi)
  • African lanternshark (E. polli)
  • Great lanternshark (E. princeps)
  • False lanternshark (E. pseudosqualiolus)
  • Smooth lanternshark (E. pusillus)
  • Dense-scale lantern shark (E. pycnolepis)
  • West Indian lanternshark (E. robinsi)
  • Fringefin lanternshark (E. schultzi)
  • Thorny lanternshark (E. sentosus)
  • Velvet belly lantern shark (E. spinax)
  • Splendid lanternshark (E. splendidus)
  • Tasmanian lanternshark (E. tasmaniensis)
  • Brown lanternshark (E. unicolor)
  • Hawaiian lanternshark (E. villosus)
  • Green lanternshark (E. virens)
Miroscyllium
  • Rasptooth dogfish (M. sheikoi)
Trigonognathus
  • Viper dogfish (T. kabeyai)
Oxynotidae
(Rough sharks)
Oxynotus
  • Prickly dogfish (O. bruniensis)
  • Caribbean roughshark (O. caribbaeus)
  • Angular roughshark (O. centrina)
  • Japanese roughshark (O. japonicus)
  • Sailfin roughshark (O. paradoxus)
Somniosidae
(Sleeper sharks)
Centroscymnus
  • Portuguese dogfish (C. coelolepis)
  • Shortnose velvet dogfish (C. cryptacanthus)
  • Roughskin dogfish (C. owstoni)
Centroselachus
  • Longnose velvet dogfish (C. crepidater)
Proscymnodon
  • Largespine velvet dogfish (P. macracanthus)
  • Plunket shark (P. plunketi)
Scymnodalatias
  • Whitetail dogfish (S. albicauda)
  • Azores dogfish (S. garricki)
  • Sparsetooth dogfish (S. oligodon)
  • Sherwood dogfish (S. sherwoodi)
Scymnodon
  • Smallmouth velvet dogfish (S. obscurus)
  • Knifetooth dogfish (S. ringens)
Somniosus
  • Southern sleeper shark (S. antarcticus)
  • Frog shark (S. longus )
  • Greenland shark (S. microcephalus)
  • Pacific sleeper shark (S. pacificus)
  • Little sleeper shark (S. rostratus)
Zameus
  • Japanese velvet dogfish (Z. ichiharai)
  • Velvet dogfish (Z. squamulosus)
Squalidae
(Dogfish sharks)
Cirrhigaleus
  • Roughskin spurdog (C. asper)
  • Mandarin dogfish (C. barbifer)
Squalus
(Spurdogs)
  • Spiny dogfish (S. acanthias)
  • Eastern highfin spurdog (S. albifrons)
  • S. acutirostris
  • Western highfin spurdog (S. altipinnis)
  • Longnose spurdog (S. blainville)
  • Fatspine spurdog (S. crassispinus)
  • Cuban dogfish (S. cubensis)
  • Eastern longnose spurdog (S. grahami)
  • Japanese spurdog (S. japonicus)
  • Shortnose spurdog (S. megalops)
  • Blacktailed spurdog (S. melanurus)
  • Shortspine spurdog (S. mitsukurii)
  • Bartail spurdog (S. notocaudatus)
  • Western longnose spurdog (S. nasutus)
  • Cyrano spurdog (S. rancureli)
  • Pacific spiny dogfish (S. suckleyi)
Order Squatiniformes (Angel sharks)
Squatinidae
Squatina
  • Sawback angelshark (S. aculeata)
  • African angelshark (S. africana)
  • Eastern Australian angelshark (Squatina albipunctata)
  • Argentine angelshark (S. argentina)
  • Chilean angelshark (S. armata)
  • Australian angelshark (S. australis)
  • Pacific angelshark (S. californica)
  • Sand devil (S. dumeril)
  • Taiwan angelshark (S. formosa)
  • Angular angel shark (S. guggenheim)
  • S. heteroptera
  • Japanese angelshark (S. japonica)
  • Indonesian angelshark (S. legnota)
  • Cortez angelshark (S. mexicana)
  • Clouded angelshark (S. nebulosa)
  • Smoothback angelshark (S. oculata)
  • S. punctata
  • Western Australian angelshark (Squatina pseudocellata)
  • Angelshark (S. squatina)
  • Ornate angelshark (S. tergocellata)
  • Ocellated angelshark (S. tergocellatoides)
Taxon identifiers
Ginglymostoma cirratum
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