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  2. Pondicherry shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pondicherry_shark

    The shark is among the 25 "most wanted lost" species that are the focus of Global Wildlife Conservation's "Search for Lost Species" initiative. [2] The Pondicherry has been spotted in rivers in India in the late 2010s. [3] A Pondicherry shark was caught in the Menik Ganga (river) in SE Sri Lanka in 2011. It was photographed and released alive.

  3. Shark meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shark_meat

    Shark meat is a seafood consisting of the flesh of sharks. Several sharks are fished for human consumption, such as porbeagles, shortfin mako shark, requiem shark, and thresher shark, among others. [1] Shark meat is popular in Asia, where it is often consumed dried, smoked, or salted. [2]

  4. Ganges shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganges_shark

    The single Irrawaddy river shark specimen stems from an area of intensive artisanal fishing, mainly gillnetting, but also line and electrofishing. Habitat degradation may pose a further threat to this shark, including water pollution and the clearing of mangrove trees for fuel, construction materials, and other products. The shark may be ...

  5. In the ocean, 'sharks are around you and you just don't know ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/ocean-sharks-around-just...

    "There are situations where you can be in a shark's immediate territory, but this probably happens more out in the ocean around areas like wrecks where a shark may frequent that area." View this ...

  6. Oceanic whitetip shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oceanic_whitetip_shark

    In the Pacific Ocean, newborns average 45–55 cm (18–22 in) long, and number two to fourteen per litter. [17] In one population off Brazil, sharks were recorded to grow an average of 25.2 cm (9.9 in) in one year, reducing to 13.6 cm (5.4 in) per year up to four years and then 9.7 cm (3.8 in) in their fifth year.

  7. Southern sleeper shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_sleeper_shark

    The southern sleeper shark feeds primarily on cephalopods, especially squid — including the giant and colossal squids — and numerous fishes.Documented stomach contents of individual sleeper sharks have also, albeit infrequently, contained the remains of marine mammals or seabirds, possibly as a result of scavenging on sunken carcasses or whale falls. [1]

  8. 5 Great White sharks swimming off Myrtle Beach SC area ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/5-great-white-sharks-swimming...

    The most recent shark, Rose, pinged off the Myrtle Beach area coast on Tuesday. The female juvenile shark weighed 600 pounds and was more than 10 feet long when she was tagged in 2020.

  9. Milk shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_shark

    Other names for this species include fish shark, grey dog shark, little blue shark, Longmans dogshark, milk dog shark, sharp-nosed (milk) shark, Walbeehm's sharp-nosed shark, and white-eye shark. [4] A 1992 phylogenetic analysis by Gavin Naylor, based on allozymes , found that the milk shark is the most basal of the four Rhizoprionodon species ...