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THE FRILLED SHARK
BBC Science Focus
|May 2025
In the dark waters of the deep sea, lurk many curious and enigmatic animals that few have seen.
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Frilled sharks (Chlamydoselachus anguineus), for instance, have been known about for more than a century, but much of their lives remain mysterious.
We know what they look like from the occasional specimens that are hauled up in deep-sea fishing nets around the world. Most of their 2m-long (6.5ft) brown or grey body is a smooth, finless tube, with a dorsal fin far down on the back, near the trailing, ribbon-like tail.
The strangest features are up at the head end, however. Frilled sharks have six large gill slits – one more than most sharks. In fact, there are only five other living species in the frilled shark's taxonomic order, the Hexanchiformes, which includes sixgill and sevengill sharks.
Dit verhaal komt uit de May 2025-editie van BBC Science Focus.
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