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Sawtooth Shark

Pristis microdon Latham, 1794

Description:

They look vicious because of their nose that is adapted to digging in soft sandy bottoms for fish that hide there. Their mouth is facing the sandy bottom.

Habitat:

"Inhabits sandy or muddy bottoms of shallow coastal waters, estuaries, river mouths, and freshwater rivers and lakes. Usually found in turbid channels of large rivers over soft mud bottoms (Ref. 2847, 44894). Adults usually found in estuaries and young ascend into fresh water. Large adults can also be found in fresh water, but are rarely caught (Ref. 12693). Feeds on benthic animals and small schooling species. Ovoviviparous (Ref. 50449). The saw is used for grubbing and attacking prey as well as for defense. The saws sell as tourist souvenirs (Ref. 7248). Occasionally caught by demersal tangle net and trawl fisheries in the Arafura Sea; possibly extinct in parts of the Indo-Pacific; highly susceptible to gill nets. Utilized for its fins and meat (both of very high value), and skin and cartilage (Ref.58048). " EOL.com site

Notes:

This is a shark in the Georgia Aquarium's Ocean Voyager exhibit. Critically Endangered Species.

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HeatherMiller
Spotted by
HeatherMiller

Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Spotted on Dec 3, 2005
Submitted on Jun 29, 2011

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