Carpet shark
| 'Orectolobiformes' | ||||||||
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| Missing image Wobbegong.jpg A Spotted Wobbegong, Orectolobus maculatus | ||||||||
| Scientific classification | ||||||||
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| Families | ||||||||
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Parascyllidae (collared carpet sharks) |
The order Orectolobiformes, also collectively known as the carpet sharks because many members have carpet-like patterned markings, includes a number of familiar types of sharks, such as the nurse sharks and whale shark, as well as some unusual species, such as the blind shark. The order is small, with only 31 species in seven genera.
Carpet sharks have two dorsal fins, without spines, and a small mouth that is forward of the eyes. Many have barbels and small gill slits, with the fifth slit overlapping the fourth. The upper lobe of the caudal fin tends to be mostly in line with the body, while the lower lobe is poorly developed, except in the case of the whale shark. While many in the order are small, the whale shark is the largest living fish.
External links
| Shark articles | |
|---|---|
| Angel | Basking | Blacktip Reef | Blue | Bull | Carpet | Cat | Cookiecutter | Freshwater | Frilled | Goblin | Gray Reef | Grey Nurse | Great White | Hammerhead | Mako | Megamouth | Nurse | Oceanic Whitetip | Porbeagle | Requiem | River | Sand | Sandbar | Saw | Silky | Sleeper | Smooth dogfish | Thresher | Tiger | Whale (shark) | Whitetip reef | Wobbegong | Zebra / Leopard | |
| Extinct shark species | |
| Megalodon | Cladoselache | Squalicorax
(Note: This template is incomplete. More links will be added as more shark articles are created on Wikipedia) |
