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Animal Database


Southern African Frilled Shark
Cbc06974dd71c78d1b14db69db9fc0d0
Information
Range Southern Angola to Southern Namibia. Frilled sharks have also been captured off South Africa, at 1,230–1,400 m (4,040–4,600 ft) deep off Eastern Cape Province, and at 300 m (980 ft) deep off KwaZulu-Natal Province
Scientific Classification
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Chondrichthyes
Order Hexanchiformes
Family Chlamydoselachidae
Genus Chlamydoselachus
Species C. africana
Conservation Status
LCSpecies
Least Concern

The Southern african frilled shark, (Chlamydoselachus africana), is a species of shark in the family Chlamydoselachidae, described in 2009. It is found in deep water from off southern Angola to southern Namibia. This species is difficult to distinguish from the better-known frilled shark, but is smaller at maturity and differs in several proportional measurements including head length and mouth width. It seems to be a specialized predator of smaller sharks, using its flexible jaws and numerous needle-like, recurved teeth to capture and swallow them whole. Reproduction is presumably ovoviviparous as with the other member of its family.

Taxonomy[]

The frilled shark, was long thought to be the only extant member of its genus and family. The existence of a second Chlamydoselachus species off southern Africa was first suspected from a specimen caught off Lüderitz, Namibia in February 1988, by the South African research ship FRS Africana (after which this species would eventually be named). The specimen was an adult male smaller than other known mature frilled shark, and subsequent investigations revealed other consistent differences between frilled sharks in this region and C. anguineus. The new species was termed Chlamydoselachus "sp. A", before being formally described in 2009 by David Ebert and Leonard Compagno, in a paper for the scientific journal Zootaxa. The holotype was a 117 cm (46 in) long immature female caught at a depth of 409 m (1,342 ft) off the Cunene River, Namibia, by the research vessel Benguela.

Distribution and Habitat[]

The southern African frilled shark has only been confirmed to occur from off southern Angola to southern Namibia. Frilled sharks have also been captured off South Africa, at 1,230–1,400 m (4,040–4,600 ft) deep off Eastern Cape Province, and at 300 m (980 ft) deep off KwaZulu-Natal Province; it is uncertain whether these specimens are the southern african frilled shark. Little is known of its habitat preferences; one known specimen was caught 425 m (1,394 ft) down in a zone of low dissolved oxygen and high nutrients, over a soft substrate.

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