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The face of a deep sea rough skin shark. All the way from 650m. Several people commented that the shark appeared to be a 'cookiecutter' shark, a small cigar-sharped shark with a bulbous snout and ...
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First-of-its-kind deep-sea ‘ghost’ shark with rare genetic ... - MSNScientists have spotted a deep-sea “ghost” white shark with a rare genetic disorder, shedding light on how such abnormalities affect endangered marine species living near the sea floor. They ...
A deep-sea angler recently reeled in this mysterious shark with bulging eyes, rough skin and an unnervingly human-like smile. (Image credit: Trapman Bermagui) ...
Trapman Bermagui, a Sydney-based fisherman, shared pictures of the bizarre animal on Facebook captioned, ‘The face of a deep sea rough skin shark. All the way from 650m.’ ...
It's a rough skin shark, also known as a species of endeavour dog shark. "These sharks are common in depths greater than 600 meters. We catch them in the wintertime usually." ...
"The face of a deep sea rough skin shark," the post reads, noting that the shark was found 650 meters (about 2,132 feet) below sea level. He said it was caught on a line. Some people said that's a ...
The caption read: "The face of a deep sea rough skin shark. All the way from 650m." Since then the post has been liked 1,500 times and gathered more than 280 comments from people wondering exactly ...
"It's a rough skin shark, also known as a species of endeavour dog shark," he explained. "These sharks are common in depths greater than 600 meters. We catch them in the wintertime usually," the ...
A fisherman in Australia was left baffled after he caught a mysterious deep sea shark with bulging eyes and protruding teeth. The Sydney-based man has posted a picture of the bizarre creature and ...
This shark fought off a deep-sea squid, first-ever picture reveals. A massive squid left battle scars on the skin of a surface-dwelling shark, revealing an entirely new connection to the deep sea.
This deep-sea shark is one of the world’s largest glowing animals. A new study has found that three species of deep-sea shark, including the six-foot-long kitefin shark, are bioluminescent.
The angular rough shark is typically dark grey-brown or black all over with some dark patches on the head and sides to help it blend into the dark deep-sea environment.
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