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Hammerhead Shark
This shark's unusual name comes from the unusual shape of its head, which allows it to find its favorite meal: stingrays. A hammerhead shark uses its wide head to trap stingrays by pinning them to the seafloor. The shark's eye placement, on each end of its very wide head, allows it to scan more area more quickly than other sharks can. The hammerhead also has special sensors across its head that helps it scan for food in the ocean. Living creatures' bodies give off electrical signals, which are picked up by sensors on the prowling hammerhead.

Hammerheads also eat bony fish, crabs, squid, lobsters, and other sea animals. These fish are grayish-brown or olive-green and they have white bellies. They have very impressive triangular, serrated teeth—like the edge of a saw's blade. Hammerheads' mouths are on the underside of their heads.
The shark hunts alone, and can find stingrays that hide under the sand on the seafloor.
Unlike many fish, hammerheads do not lay eggs. A female gives birth to live young. One litter can range from six to about 50 pups. When a hammerhead pup is born, its head is more rounded than its parents'.
There have been very few recorded attacks on people by the great hammerhead.
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SCIENTIFIC NAME
Sphyrna
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FAMILY NAME Sphyrnidae
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ENDANGERED STATUS
VULNERABLE
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CLASSIFICATION
Fish
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LIFE SPAN
20-30 years
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DIET
Carnivore
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HABITAT
Ocean


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