Species page

Etmopterus Burgessi

Lanternsharks are miniature deepwater predators that often carry their own dim light show. In PocketShark, this family entry signals a small dark shark of the deep slope, usually better known from catches than from direct observation. Most lanternsharks are small, dark sharks with no anal fin, dorsal spines, and light-producing photophores arranged in species-specific patterns. Lanternsharks are found in deep tropical, subtropical, and temperate waters worldwide. Many species have localized ranges or are known from only a few deepwater regions.

Etmopterus burgessi

Overview

Lanternsharks are miniature deepwater predators that often carry their own dim light show. In PocketShark, this family entry signals a small dark shark of the deep slope, usually better known from catches than from direct observation. Most lanternsharks are small, dark sharks with no anal fin, dorsal spines, and light-producing photophores arranged in species-specific patterns. Lanternsharks are found in deep tropical, subtropical, and temperate waters worldwide. Many species have localized ranges or are known from only a few deepwater regions.

They usually inhabit outer continental shelves, slopes, seamount flanks, and deep pelagic layers, often well below sunlight.

Why it matters: The photophore patterns of lanternsharks are so distinctive that they can help separate similar-looking species.

Scientific nameEtmopterus burgessi
FamilyEtmopteridae
OrderSqualiformes

What this shark is

Most lanternsharks are small, dark sharks with no anal fin, dorsal spines, and light-producing photophores arranged in species-specific patterns.

Where it lives

Lanternsharks are found in deep tropical, subtropical, and temperate waters worldwide. Many species have localized ranges or are known from only a few deepwater regions.

They usually inhabit outer continental shelves, slopes, seamount flanks, and deep pelagic layers, often well below sunlight.

How it differs from similar sharks

Body shape, size, and habitat are the main cues that separate it from related sharks.

Compare it against Brown lanternshark, Etmopterus Alphus, and Etmopterus Benchleyi.

Why it is notable

They seldom interact directly with people. Most information comes from deepwater surveys and incidental capture.

Related shark pages

These links are meant to help readers continue through related species, not force extra clicks.

Etmopterus unicolor

Brown lanternshark

Lanternsharks are miniature deepwater predators that often carry their own dim light show. In PocketShark, this family entry signals a small dark shark of the deep slope, usually better known from catches than from direct observation.

0.8 m max
National Fish Collection specimen photograph of Etmopterus alphus in profile; not to scale.
Etmopterus alphus

Etmopterus Alphus

Lanternsharks are miniature deepwater predators that often carry their own dim light show. In PocketShark, this family entry signals a small dark shark of the deep slope, usually better known from catches than from direct observation.

Ninja lanternshark scientific figure showing the dark body and fin placement; not to scale.
Etmopterus benchleyi

Etmopterus Benchleyi

Lanternsharks are miniature deepwater predators that often carry their own dim light show. In PocketShark, this family entry signals a small dark shark of the deep slope, usually better known from catches than from direct observation.