Little Sleeper Shark Jaw with Data ex Dr. Gordon Hubbell

Little Sleeper Shark Jaw with Data ex Dr. Gordon Hubbell

Brand: Shark Jaws Online
SKU: 3936
625.00 USD Out of stock Buy at Merchant

NO INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING Little Sleeper Shark Jaw with Data (Somniosus rostratus) The sleeper sharks are the quiet giants of the deep — and Somniosus rostratus is their most elusive, least understood member. Rarely encountered, sporadically recorded across a fragmented range, and almost never retained when caught, the Little Sleeper Shark is exactly the kind of species that doesn't end up in private collections. That this jaw exists at all, with data, from Dr. Gordon Hubbell's archive, says everything about the caliber of material he spent a lifetime pursuing. Species & Classification Scientific Name: Somniosus rostratus (Risso, 1827) Common Names: Little Sleeper Shark, Lemargo Family: Somniosidae (Sleeper Sharks) Order: Squaliformes Etymology: Somniosus is Latin for "sleepy," reflecting Lesueur's observation that these sharks appear slow and sluggish due to their relatively small fins; rostratus is Latin for "beaked," referring to the species' elongated rostrum FishBase Biology & Physical Characteristics Snout short and broadly rounded; head short; cusps of most lower teeth large, high, and semi-oblique with low roots; lateral trunk denticles with flat, wide crowns giving the skin a smooth texture Shark-References Maximum recorded length 143 cm; young born at 21–28 cm Shark-References Maturity reached at approximately 108 cm; common length around 100 cm; no dorsal fin spines and no anal fin FishBase Maintains a large liver comprising 20–30% of body mass, which produces high levels of trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) providing buoyancy, antifreeze properties, and pressure tolerance at depth Grokipedia Small eyes and enlarged olfactory brain regions prioritize olfaction and electroreception over vision in the permanently dark deep-sea environment Grokipedia Longevity estimated at over 20 years Grokipedia Habitat & Distribution Found in the northeast Atlantic, western Mediterranean, and western Pacific around New Zealand, at depths between 200 and 1,000 m Wikipedia Depth range recorded from 180 to 2,734 m — one of the deepest confirmed depth ranges for any sleeper shark FishBase Also recorded from Israel and Cuba; historically fished off Portugal, though that industry had essentially ceased by 1996 Wikipedia Mediterranean occurrences are sporadic, concentrated in the Strait of Sicily, south Tyrrhenian Sea, northwestern Ionian Sea, and south Adriatic Sea ScienceDirect Favors soft-bottom substrates, particularly sandy-mud sediments characteristic of deep-sea bathyal environments; adapted to cold waters of 8.6–14.2°C Grokipedia Diet & Behavior Main prey is squid; exhibits low activity and slow swimming consistent with the sleeper shark family Sharkwater Characterized by lethargic locomotion with swim speeds among the slowest recorded for any fish — enabling ambush predation rather than active pursuit Grokipedia Possible diel vertical migrations suggested by stomach contents, with individuals potentially ascending to shallower depths at night for foraging Grokipedia Reproduction Ovoviviparous; exhibits distinct pairing with embrace during mating Shark-References Females are aplacental viviparous, giving birth to 8–17 pups per litter Wikipedia The Strait of Sicily has been identified as a likely spawning area for the species in the Mediterranean ScienceDirect Much about the reproduction of this species remains unknown due to the extreme rarity of confirmed encounters Conservation Status Listed as Data Deficient by the IUCN — insufficient data to track population trends Sharkwater Occasionally taken on longlines and in bottom trawls; almost never retained when caught; post-discard survival is likely very rare Wikipedia Like other squaloid sharks, likely slow to mature; the relatively small and fragmented range compounds vulnerability Wikipedia Interactions with pelagic drifting swordfish fisheries in the Mediterranean result in increased mortality rates ScienceDirect Misc. & Collector Facts The Little Sleeper Shark shares its genus with the Greenland Shark (S. microcephalus) and the Pacific Sleeper Shark (S. pacificus) — two of the most celebrated deepwater sharks in the world. S. rostratus is the smallest and most elusive of the three, making a jaw specimen with data exponentially rarer than either of its famous relatives The flesh contains high concentrations of TMAO, which is toxic if consumed raw — a biochemical adaptation to deep-sea pressure that it shares with the Greenland Shark Grokipedia The common name "sleeper shark" derives from their characteristically slow swimming, low activity level, and perceived non-aggressive nature Wikipedia "With data" includes collection locality and specimen documentation — essential for a species with a sporadic, poorly mapped distribution across three ocean regions Dr. Gordon Hubbell provenance adds significant authentication and collectibility value Ideal for: sleeper shark and Somniosidae collectors, deep-sea Squaliformes specialists, Mediterranean and Atlantic specimen enthusiasts, museum-quality natural history displays

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