Species page
Great Hammerhead
Long-cephalofoil hunter that patrols warm coastal waters.
Species page
Long-cephalofoil hunter that patrols warm coastal waters.
This shark belongs to the hammerhead family, where the head itself is the signature field mark. PocketShark uses that broad sensory platform as the visual anchor, then adds species-specific differences when the source base is stronger. The side-expanded head is the obvious character, but body shape, dorsal-fin proportions, and the outline of the cephalofoil help separate species. Hammerheads occur mainly in tropical, subtropical, and warm-temperate seas worldwide. Species ranges span estuaries, reefs, continental shelves, and open ocean.
The family uses both coastal and pelagic habitat, with juveniles often favoring shallow nursery areas and larger animals moving more broadly.
A high-priority conservation species with heavy historical fishing pressure.
Why it matters: The hammer-shaped head spreads sensory organs over a wide area, which may improve navigation and prey detection.
The side-expanded head is the obvious character, but body shape, dorsal-fin proportions, and the outline of the cephalofoil help separate species.
Hammerheads occur mainly in tropical, subtropical, and warm-temperate seas worldwide. Species ranges span estuaries, reefs, continental shelves, and open ocean.
The family uses both coastal and pelagic habitat, with juveniles often favoring shallow nursery areas and larger animals moving more broadly.
Extremely wide cephalofoil for sensory processing
Compare it against Bonnethead, Scalloped Hammerhead, and Sphyrna Alleni.
Some large hammerheads deserve caution, yet direct incidents are uncommon compared with the scale of fishery mortality faced by the family.
These links are meant to help readers continue through related species, not force extra clicks.
Small hammerhead with a rounded head and quick turns.
Distinct hammer-shaped head packed with sensory power.
A shark in the carcharhiniformes group.
A shark in the carcharhiniformes group.