Saw Shark
Description & Facts
saw shark, (order Pristiophoriformes), also spelled sawshark, any of about nine species of long-snouted marine sharks belonging to the order Pristiophoriformes. Saw sharks are found in tropical and temperate marine waters of the western Atlantic Ocean near Florida and the Bahamas, the Indian Ocean near India and southeastern Africa, and the Pacific Ocean near eastern Asia and Australia. Saw sharks are characterized by a long, slender, sawlike snout equipped with sharp, toothlike projections on each edge. They resemble the rays known as sawfishes but have a pair of barbels (slender, fleshy protuberances) on the underside of the saw and have gill slits on the sides of the head, not underneath.
Saw sharks grow to a maximum of about 1.37 metres (about 4.5 feet) long. They feed on fish, striking and cutting their prey with their saws, but are harmless to humans. There are two genera of saw sharks: Pliotrema, with six pairs of gill openings, and Pristiophorus, with five.
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