crocodile shark

fish
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Also known as: Japanese ragged-tooth shark, Pseudocarcharias kamoharai, water crocodile
Also called:
Japanese ragged-tooth shark or water crocodile

crocodile shark, (Pseudocarcharias kamoharai), small open-ocean shark best known for its large eyes, long gill slits, and formidable teeth. The crocodile shark is the sole member of genus Pseudocarcharias in the family Pseudocarchariidae, order Lamniformes. It inhabits tropical and subtropical oceans worldwide, and it is the smallest species of lamniform shark (or mackerel shark) in the world. The shark’s common name is taken from the Japanese word mizuwani, which means “water crocodile.”

Crocodile sharks are rarely found close to shore. Their habitat extends from the ocean surface to depths of roughly 590 meters (about 1,940 feet). To compensate for its lack of the swim bladder— an organ common to all sharks and rays that also occurs in some other fishes—an abundance of squalene oil in the liver presumably helps them maintain mid-water buoyancy. Aside from this oil, crocodile sharks are of little interest for commercial fishing.

Form and function

The largest adult crocodile sharks can grow up to 1.2 meters (3.9 feet) long, but most range between 90 and 110 cm (35.4 and 43.3 inches). The body is cylindrical and slender; it is colored dark brown on its back with a lighter underside; and five long gill slits on each side extend to the top surface of the short, broad head. Its eyes are remarkably large, and it can thrust its jaws forward to snatch prey. The crocodile shark has two small dorsal, or top, fins, which lack the frontal spines found in some other sharks, and a hard ridge of tissue called a keel extends horizontally along each side of the body, ending just before the tail fin. Two precaudal pits, or indentations, are located just before the tail fin, one on the top of the body and another on the bottom.

The species’s front teeth are large and spikelike, with each tooth having a single long cusp, or point. The teeth become gradually smaller and more bladelike toward the back of the jaws. Although little is known of this shark’s diet, its long, slender teeth suggest that its prey includes small to moderately large fish, as well as squid and other cephalopods.

The species migrates vertically in the water column in search of food, diving during the day and coming to the surface at night. Although crocodile sharks have not been implicated in any attacks on people, between the 1980s and the early 2000s they were blamed for damaging deep-sea fiber-optic cables after several teeth linked to the species were found embedded in the cables. Improvements to the cables’ sheathing, however, have largely eliminated this problem.

Female crocodile sharks reach sexual maturity between ages five and six, with many males becoming sexually mature slightly earlier at age five. Crocodile sharks are ovoviviparous, meaning that their eggs are fertilized internally and retained within the mother until the young hatch and emerge alive (see also reproductive behavior: fishes). Breeding females may produce up to four offspring in a single litter, each one measuring about 40 cm (16 inches) in length. During development in the mother’s uterus, young crocodile sharks feed on the yolk sacs of their own egg and later presumably engage in ovophagy, a form of cannibalism in which fetal sharks attack and eat other embryos and fertilized eggs.

Conservation status

The International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) considers the crocodile shark to be a species of least concern, because of its vast, open-ocean distribution. Although the species is captured as bycatch by the commercial fishing industry, such encounters are relatively rare, and these fishes have little commercial value, aside from their liver oil, which is sometimes used in cosmetic products. Captured crocodile sharks are often separated from the rest of the haul and discarded at sea.

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John P. Rafferty