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  2. Pacific angelshark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_angelshark

    Locally, this species may also be referred to as angel shark, California angel shark, or monkfish. [3] The Chilean angelshark (Squatina armata) of the southeastern Pacific was synonymized with this species by Kato, Springer and Wagner in 1967, but was later tentatively recognized as a separate species again by Leonard Compagno.

  3. Angelshark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelshark

    Landings of Pacific angel shark increased through the mid-1980s and reached over 1,125 tonnes in 1986, becoming the shark species with the highest total reported landings off the US West coast that year. [5] Angel sharks possess extensible jaws that can rapidly snap upwards to capture prey and have long, needle-like teeth.

  4. Squatina squatina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squatina_squatina

    The word squatina is the name for skate in Latin; it was made the genus name for all angel sharks by the French zoologist André Duméril in 1806. [3] Other common names used for this species include angel, angel fiddle fish, angel puffy fish, angel ray, angelfish, escat jueu, fiddle fish, monk, and monkfish. [4]

  5. Ocean predator missing since 1800s appears in fishers’ net in ...

    www.aol.com/ocean-predator-missing-since-1800s...

    In 1887, a researcher published the description of a Chilean angel shark, a small, ray-like shark that lives in shallow coastal waters, but it was incomplete and lacked accuracy, according to an ...

  6. Massive makos, Queen Bosses and a baby angel shark on ...

    lite.aol.com/tech/story/0001/20240703/d4197ff...

    Shark Week” highlights also include a look at whether angel sharks remain in Japan’s waters — including remarkable footage of the birth of velvet dogfish shark pups — and why a South Pacific resort has become a shark attack hotspot with bull, tiger and Great White sharks moving closer and closer to the beaches.

  7. Chilean angelshark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilean_angelshark

    The Chilean angelshark mainly consumes lizardfish, teleosts and their remains, crustaceans, mollusks, elasmobranchs, and some species of shrimp. The species can be labeled as a selective, piscivorous, and carcinophagus predator.

  8. Several shark species are facing extinction. Here’s how you ...

    www.aol.com/several-shark-species-facing...

    But many species of these aquatic apex predators are now in danger of dying out forever. Older than dinosaurs and trees, sharks have endured a lot throughout their 450 million years on Earth. They ...

  9. Clouded angelshark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clouded_angelshark

    The clouded angelshark (Squatina nebulosa) is an angelshark of the family Squatinidae found in the northwest Pacific from the southeastern Sea of Japan to Taiwan between latitudes 47° N and 22° N. Its length is up to 1.63 m. Reproduction is ovoviviparous.