Hammerhead Shark | Hammerhead Sharks are appropriately named after their flat shaped heads. Hammerhead sharks are large carnivorous fish that prey on large fish and occasionally hammerhead sharks
will hunt small water mammals. Hammerhead sharks are found in the
warmer waters of oceans worldwide but hammerhead sharks are particularly
found in coastal waters, and along continental shelves. The shallow
waters that the hammerhead sharks inhabit allow the hammerhead shark to hunt prey more easily.
There are 9 different species of hammerhead shark worldwide, ranging from 3ft to 20ft in length! Hammerhead sharks are not commonly known to attack humans but can be aggressive if a human came into contact with a hammerhead shark. The flat shaped head of
the hammerhead shark is thought to allow the hammerhead shark to detect
prey more easily, as it increases the hammerhead sharks sensitivity to
sonar activity. Hammerhead sharks are thought to use sonar waves
detection in a similar way to their five main senses, so its like the hammerhead shark has a sixth sense.
The shape of the head of the hammerhead shark is made up of two projections on either side of the face of the hammerhead shark, which gives the hammerhead shark the head
shape that resembles a hammer almost rectangular in shape. The eyes and
nostrils of the hammerhead shark are found at the ends of the hammer
allowing the hammerhead shark to have better vision and smell of the
surrounding water. Like many other species of shark the hammerhead shark is a solitary hunter during the night,
but during the daytime hammerhead sharks are known to form schools of
up to 100 hammerhead shark individuals. Hammerhead sharks are commonly
seen in larger groups during the summer months when the hammerhead
sharks are migrating together in search of cooler waters.
The great hammerhead shark is
the largest species of hammerhead shark and one of the few species of
hammerhead shark that is potentially dangerous to humans. This is due to
the sheer size of the giant hammerhead shark and also because the giant
hammerhead is known to have an aggressive temperament. Other species of hammerhead shark tend to pose little or no threat to humans as these species of hammerhead shark are generally much smaller than the giant hammerhead shark and are slightly calmer in their nature.
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