Species page
Goblin Shark
A deep-sea ambush shark with an extendable jaw.
Species page
A deep-sea ambush shark with an extendable jaw.
Goblin sharks are deep-slope specialists with a long blade-like snout and remarkable projecting jaws. A single glance at the head shape is usually enough to place them, even when little else is visible. The long flattened snout and highly protrusible jaws make this family instantly recognizable. The body is soft and flabby compared with active pelagic sharks. Goblin sharks are recorded from deep continental slopes and submarine canyons in many ocean basins, but captures are scattered and infrequent.
They are deepwater sharks, usually associated with slope environments rather than shallow coasts.
A famous example of deep-sea shark weirdness.
Why it matters: The jaws can shoot forward dramatically, giving goblin sharks one of the most unusual feeding strikes among sharks.
The long flattened snout and highly protrusible jaws make this family instantly recognizable. The body is soft and flabby compared with active pelagic sharks.
Goblin sharks are recorded from deep continental slopes and submarine canyons in many ocean basins, but captures are scattered and infrequent.
They are deepwater sharks, usually associated with slope environments rather than shallow coasts.
Slingshot-style protruding jaw
Compare it against American Pocket Shark, Dwarf Lanternshark, and Frilled Shark.
Human interaction is negligible outside deepwater capture. It is a shark most people will know only from preserved specimens or rare images.
Species-level taxonomy was verified from Sharkipedia's current species list and taxonomy workbook. In this pass, the narrative fields are cautious family-level placeholders synthesized from broad shark references, chiefly the FAO Sharks of the World catalogue, because a stronger multi-source species-level synthesis was not assembled here without risking invented detail. Replace this with a direct species-level synthesis before publication in the app.
These links are meant to help readers continue through related species, not force extra clicks.
Tiny deep-sea shark with glowing pocket glands near its front fins.
One of the smallest sharks on Earth.
A deep-water, eel-like shark with frilled gill slits.