Smalltooth sandtiger
(Odontaspis ferox)
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Given Names
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French
: Requin féroce
German
: Kleinzahn-Sandtigerhai
Spanish
: Solrayo; Salroig; Salraig
Italian
: Cagnaccio; Smidiru; Piscicani; Cagnassun de fundo
Other
Scientific Names : Carcharias ferox |
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Diagnosis
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| A large,
stocky shark with anal fin and second dorsal fin conspicuously smaller than
the first dorsal fin; 1st dorsal mid-placed on back and closer to pectoral
fins than pelvic fins; pectoral fins short, broad and paddle-like. Origin
of second dorsal over posterior ends of pelvic fin bases, Snout dorsally
depressed, conical and rather long; eyes fairly large, mainly black in colour,
non-feline in appearance and without nictitating eyelids. Mouth extending
posterior to eyes; protruding, fang-like unserrated teeth with two or more
pairs of very prominent lateral cusps; 3 to 5 rows of smaller intermediate
teeth between the anterior ad lateral teeth of the upper-jaw. Caudal fin strongly
asymmetric, without lateral keels but upper precaudal pit present. Dorsal
colour mid-grey or grey-brown, sometimes with ochre spots on the dorsum and
flanks; ventral surfaces paler grey or white with dusky blotching on ventral
surfaces of pectoral and pelvic fins; some fin apices dusky in juveniles but
indistinct. |
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Size
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| To at least
360cm but generally to 300cm; size at birth over 105cm TL. |
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Distribution
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| Océan
Atlantique : Infrequent or rare, but probably wider-ranging in warm-temperate
and tropical deep water than current records suggest. Occurrences mostly
confined to coastal zones adjacent to Mediterranean interface, between 30N
and 37N, and include southern Spain and Portugal; Madeira and Morrocco; nominal
from Gulf of Gascony (northern Spain), suggesting the potential for occasional
captures anywhere along the Portuguese coast. A recent (1995) record from
Natal, N.E. Brazil, represents a substantial global range extension and
supports the inference that these sharks are actually wide-ranging in warmer
parts of the North Atlantic.
Mer Méditerranée : Infrequent but more commonly
encountered here than within the N.E. Atlantic. Mainly Western and Central
Mediterranean, deeper waters from Gibraltar to Sicily; Alboran and Catalon
Seas off Valencia region and Balearics; also Cote d'Azur and Ligurian Seas;
Sardinia; Tyrrhennian Sea, particularly at islands; Algeria and Tunisia,
Sicilian Channel; Straits of Messina and Ionian Sea along Italian coastline;
also Adriatic; Greek mainland coasts, Crete, Aegean Sea and Turkey; probably
rare or absent to the southeast of Rhodes but scant data.
Océan Indien : South African coasts.
Océan Pacifique : Japan coasts, autralian coasts,
Hawaii, South and the golf of California.
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Biology
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| A poorly-known
shark of generally deepwater on continental and insular shelves down to at
least 420m, but also infrequently in shallower littoral waters (less so in
the Atlantic), particularly at remote, rocky islands adjacent to deepwater;
found mainly near to the bottom based on Mediterranean captures. Zava and
Montagna (1992) describe a recent (1991) specimen (female, 230cmTL) taken
at Linosa, Isole Pelagie (Sicilian Chanel) at a depth between 10 and 40m.
This shark is also sporadically caught by setlines south-west of Malta,
at depths of 40 to 200m over rocky bottoms and mainly at night. Assumedly
ovoviviparous, but no reproductive data. Females mature at 360cm and males
at 275cm. |
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Feeding
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| Regional
feeding ecology is poorly-known, but available data on stomach-contents
demonstrates a primarily piscivorous diet of small bony fishes, also squid
and crustaceans (shrimp). Compagno (1984) suggests that the less robust
and weakly-differentiated tooth structure of this shark implies a
diet of smaller and less active prey than that of the sandtiger Carcharias
taurus. |
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Similar Species
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| The Grey
nurse shark (Carcharias Taurus). |
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Endangerment
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| Unknown |
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Danger to humans
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| Probably
harmless. |
This
page has been designed by Fadi Fakhoury
with the help of the Shark
Trust and its chairman Mr Ian Fergusson.
The Shark Trust
36 Kingfisher Court,Hambridge Road,
Newbury, Berkshire,RG14 5SJ, UK.
Tel(+44) 01635 551150
Fax(+44) 01635 550230
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