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Frilled shark



         


shark, the sole living member of the Chlamydoselachidae in the order Hexanchiformes. It is very different from the other hexanchiform sharks, and it has been recently proposed that the frilled shark should be given its own order: Chlamydoselachiformes. Additional extinct types are known from fossil teeth.

Superficially the frilled shark resembles a dark brown or gray eel, but the six gill slits identify it as a shark. The tissue of the gill slits protudes somewhat, thus inspiring the common name. Its dorsal fin is small, anal fin large, and the caudal fin is highly asymmetric, the ventral part almost unnoticeable. Its teeth are small, tricuspid, and very sharp. It has been recorded at up to 2 meters in length.

Distribution is worldwide, but they seem to be uncommon across this range. The sharks are usually found at depths of 120 m to 1,300 m. They typically eat other sharks, squid, and bony fish.

Reproduction is not well understood, but like many other sharks they bear live young, with litter sizes of 2–12. It has been suggested that the gestation period is about 3.5 years, which would give the frilled shark the longest gestation of any vertebrate, considerably exceeding the elephant's period of 22 months.

Frilled sharks appear regularly in the catches from bottom trawling, and when caught are used as food or for Shark species || |- |align=center| Angel | Basking | Blacktip reef | Blue | Bull | Carpet | Cat | Cookiecutter | Freshwater | Frilled | Goblin | Gray reef | Great White | Hammerhead | Mako | Megamouth | Nurse | Oceanic Whitetip | Requiem | River | Sandbar | Saw | Silky | Sleeper | Smooth dogfish | Thresher | Tiger | Whale (shark) | Whitetip reef | Zebra / Leopard |- |- !align=center| Extinct shark species || |- |align=center| Megalodon | Cladoselache (Note: This template is incomplete. More shark species will be added as more shark articles are created on BambooWeb)






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