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Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= “saw”

Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

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Page 1: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Order: PristiophoriformesFamily: Pristiophoridae

(Sawsharks)

Etymology: Greek, pristis= “saw”

Page 2: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Taxonomy

• Pliotrema– P. warreni (Sixgill

sawshark)

• Pristiophorus– P. Cirratus (Longnose shark)

– P. japonicus (Japanese sawshark)

– P. nudipinnis (Shortnose sawshark)

– P. schroderi (Bahamas sawshark)

– 4 undescribed species

2 genera, 5 species

Page 3: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

General Characteristics

• 5-6 gill slits• Large spiracles

behind eyes

• 2 large dorsal fins (no spines)

• Somewhat long dorsal lobe on caudal fin (no ventral lobe)

Page 4: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

General Characteristics• Small sharks, <2 m• Benthic/

benthopelagic, up to & > 366 m

• Sawlike snout=rostrum

• Rostral barbels on ventral side of snout

• Teeth replaced (unlike sawfish) when lost, alternate sizes

Page 5: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Sawfish• Superorder: Batoidea• Order: Pristiformes• Family: Pristidae

– Much larger maximum size– No barbels– Evenly sized teeth– Gill slits on undersurface

Page 6: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Diagnostic Featuresususa;;y distinguished by teeth count

• Pliotrema warreni- Sixgill sawshark– 6 pairs of gill openings– Found in W. Indian Ocean (SE coast of S. Africa)

Page 7: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

• Pristiophorus cirratus- Longnose sawshark– 9-10 teeth in front of barbels, 9 behind– 1st dorsal origin behind rear tips of pectorals– Found in W. Pacific (Australia, Philippines?)

Page 8: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

• Pristiophorus japonicus- Japanese sawshark– 15-26 teeth in front of barbels, 9-17+ behind– 1st dorsal origin behind rear tip of pectorals– Found in W. Pacific

Page 9: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

• Pristiophorus nudipinnis- Shortnose sawshark– 13 teeth in front of barbels, 6 behind– 1st dorsal opposite free rear tips of

pectorals– Found in S. Pacific (southern shelf of

Australia)

Page 10: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

• Pristiophorus schroederi- Bahamas sawshark– 13-14 teeth in front of barbels, 9-10

behind– 1st dorsal opposite free rear tips of

pectorals– Found in W. Atlantic (region btwn. Cuba,

FL, and Bahamas)

Page 11: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Reproduction/Life Span

• Ovoviviparous- 7-17 pups (average of 10)• Gestation ~ 12 months• Reach maturity ~ 2 years• Parents provide food and protection

during post-birth (duration unknown, 1.5 years?)

• Breed seasonally, every two years• Have been known to live up to 15 years

in wild

Page 12: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Habitat/Food Habits

• 640-950 m in and around cont’l & insular shelves & upper slopes

• Feed on , shrimp, squids, & crustaceans

• Cruise along bottom using barbels & ampullae of Lorenzini on saw to detect prey in mud or sand

• Attack prey w/ side to side swipes of the saw

Page 13: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Commercial Value/Predators

• Longnose sawshark and Shortnose sawshark caught commercially off Australia

• Japanese sawfish highly valued for making “kamaboko”- tradional Japanese fishcake

• Humans are main predator (trawl fishing), also larger sharks

Page 14: Order: Pristiophoriformes Family: Pristiophoridae (Sawsharks) Etymology: Greek, pristis= saw

Bibliography• Carrier, J.C., et. al. 2004. Biology of Sharks and Their Relatives. CRC

Press, Boca Raton, FL. p. 55• Castro, J.I. 1983. The sharks of North American waters. Texas A&M

University Press, College Station, TX. pp.35-36.• Compagno, L.J. 1984. FAO species catalogue. Vol. 4. Sharks of the

World. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Part 1- Hexanchiformes to Lamniformes. FAO Fish. Synop. 125(4/1): 1-249.

• Krcmaric, D. and K. Francl. 2006. "Pristiophorus cirratus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed September 16, 2007 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Pristiophorus_cirratus.html.

• Martin, R. Aidan.  2003.  Copyright and Usage Policy.  World Wide Web Publication,

• Retrieved September 16th, 2007 from: http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/shark_profiles/pristiophoriformes.htm.

• Slaughter, B. & Springer, S. 1968. Replacement of Rostral Teeth in Sawfishes and

• Sawsharks. Copeia Vol 1968 (#3- 8/3)1. pp: 499-506.