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Phylum Chordata. Order Orectolobiformes. Mouth completely in front of eyes Both dorsal fins without spines Five pairs of gill slits Anal fin present Broad snout . Family Ginglymostomatidae. two spineless, rounded dorsal fins with the first dorsal fin much larger than second
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Order Orectolobiformes • Mouth completely in front of eyes • Both dorsal fins without spines • Five pairs of gill slits • Anal fin present • Broad snout
Family Ginglymostomatidae • two spineless, rounded dorsal fins with the first dorsal fin much larger than second • one anal fin • moderately long barbels reach the mouth
Ginglymostoma cirratum-nurse shark Location • Size: 7.5-9.75 feet • Weight: 200-367 lbs. (typical) • Nurse sharks are nocturnal and will often rest on sea floor during the day in groups of up to 40 sharks sometimes piled on top of each other
Family Rhincodontidae • A unique color pattern of light spots and vertical and horizontal stripes, in the form of a checkerboard • No subterminal notch on caudal fin • Large first and small second dorsal fin • Very large pectoral fins (much larger than pelvic)
Rhincodontypus-whale shark • Size: 13-39 feet; believed to reach maximum size of 59 feet • Weight: Up to 26,000 lbs. • Largest fish alive today • Live over 70 years • Docile and at times playful with divers