There is one species in this family of sharks. The megamouth shark was first discovered in 1976. It is found in deep ocean waters off the coasts of California, Hawaii, Japan, and Australia. It is around 16 feet long and has small hooked teeth, two dorsal fins, an anal fin, five pairs of gill slits, small eyes, a big head, a rounded snout, and a very big mouth! It is a filter feeder. It swims with its mouth open and take sin water and filters out small crustaceans, fish eggs, and larvae with gill rakers located on its gill slits.
World Status Key
Least Concern Near Threatened Vulnerable Endangered Critically Endangered Extinct in Wild Extinct
Status and range is taken from ICUN Redlist. If no status is listed, there is not enough data to establish status.
US Status Key
Threatened in US Threatened in NH Endangered in US Endangered in NH Introduced
Status taken from US Fish and Wildlife and NH Fish and Game
New Hampshire Species |
|
North/Central American Species |
None
|
|
Megamouth Shark - Megachasma pelagios |
|