When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Oophagy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oophagy

    In contrast, adelphophagy is the cannibalism of a multi-celled embryo. [1] Oophagy is thought to occur in all sharks in the order Lamniformes and has been recorded in the bigeye thresher (Alopias superciliosus), the pelagic thresher (A. pelagicus), the shortfin mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) and the porbeagle (Lamna nasus) among others. [1]

  3. Frilled shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frilled_shark

    The frilled shark eats a diet of cephalopods, Nudibranchs, smaller sharks, and bony fish; [2] 60 percent of the diet is composed of squid varieties, such as the Chiroteuthis, the Histioteuthis, and the Onychoteuthis, the Sthenoteuthis and the Todarodes; [17] and other sharks, as indicated by the stomach contents of a 1.6 m (5.2 ft)–long ...

  4. Sand tiger shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_tiger_shark

    The sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus), grey/gray nurse shark, spotted ragged-tooth shark, or blue-nurse sand tiger, is a species of shark that inhabits subtropical and temperate waters worldwide. It inhabits the continental shelf , from sandy shorelines (hence the name sand tiger shark) and submerged reefs to a depth of around 191 m (627 ft ...

  5. Lamniformes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamniformes

    Mackerel sharks, also called white sharks, are large, fast-swimming sharks, found in oceans worldwide. They include the great white, the mako, porbeagle shark, and salmon shark. Mackerel sharks have pointed snouts, spindle-shaped bodies, and gigantic gill openings. The first dorsal fin is large, high, stiff and angular or somewhat rounded.

  6. Filial cannibalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filial_cannibalism

    Filial cannibalism occurs when an adult individual of a species consumes all or part of the young of its own species or immediate offspring. Filial cannibalism occurs in many species ranging from mammals to insects , and is especially prevalent in various types of fish species with males that engage in egg guardianship. [ 1 ]

  7. Hammerhead shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammerhead_shark

    These baby sharks huddle together and swim toward warmer water until they are old and large enough to survive on their own. [18] In 2007, the bonnethead shark was found to be capable of asexual reproduction via automictic parthenogenesis, in which a female's ovum fuses with a polar body to form a zygote without the need for a male. This was the ...

  8. College student records encounter with shark so he could tell ...

    www.aol.com/news/college-student-records...

    An Italian college student was bitten by a shark in Australia last week in a shocking incident captured on camera — caught only because the 20-year-old wanted to be able to say goodbye to his ...

  9. Ovoviviparity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovoviviparity

    The characteristic quivering abdomen caused by movement of tadpoles within a pregnant female Limnonectes larvaepartus.. Ovoviviparity, ovovivipary, ovivipary, or aplacental viviparity is a term used as a "bridging" form of reproduction between egg-laying oviparous and live-bearing viviparous reproduction.