Port Jackson Shark (Heterodontus portusjacksoni)
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Revision as of 17:56, 15 June 2020 by 172.114.231.88 (talk)
Port Jackson Shark
Heterodontus portusjacksoni
3785 Litres (1000 US G.)
152.4-167.6cm (60-66 ")
8.1 - 8.4
17.8-22.2°C (64 -72 °F)
8-12 °d
1:1 M:F
15-25 years
Family
Heterodontidae
Contents
Additional names
- Port Jackson Shark
Additional scientific names
- Squalus portusjacksoni, Cestracion heterodontus, Heterondotus bonaespei
Origin[edit]
- Western Pacific: southern Australia (including Western Australia) and one record from New Zealand.
Sexing[edit]
- Mature females are larger than mature males, males have visible claspers. Not known to breed in captivity. Males become sexually mature around 8 to 10 years of age and females around 11 to 14 years of age.
Tank compatibility[edit]
- This is a predatory shark that will kill and eat any invertebrate or fish it can catch. Best in large species tanks.
Diet[edit]
- Can be difficult to feed and may only take live food. After time may be weaned on to shellfish, chopped crustaceans, squid and shrimp.
Feeding regime[edit]
- Feed once a day.
Environment specifics[edit]
- This fish requires an exceptionally large tank and is best only reserved for those who can maintain public-aquarium sized tanks, and with the experience to maintain the correct water quality as this fast-growing shark is sensitive to changes.
Behaviour[edit]
- A voracious hunter with sharp teeth to match, generally harmless to larger fish or human hands unless provoked, it can inflict a nasty bite.
- Port Jackson sharks have the ability to eat and breathe at the same time. This ability is unusual for sharks which mostly need to swim with the mouth open to force water over the gills. The Port Jackson shark can pump water into the first enlarged gill slit and out through the other four gill slits. By pumping water across the gills, the shark does not need to move to breathe. It can lie on the bottom for long periods of time.
Identification[edit]
- An elongate shark with a slender tail and large head. The eyes are located near the top of the head, while the mouth is almost downward pointing with a rounded nose. It is brown in colour with a paler belly and with black bands and markings irregularly down the body. The Port Jackson has one spine on each of its two dorsal fins which can cause serious injury.
Pictures[edit]
External links[edit]
- Fishbase (Mirrors: Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination)