Reference guide

Shark Identification Guide

When you do not know the species yet, start with body plan, head shape, fin placement, pattern, habitat, and depth. This page is built to narrow the options before you jump into a single species profile.

Shape first Habitat matters Compare, then name

1. Start with silhouette

A torpedo-shaped lamnid, a flat carpet shark, and an eel-like deepwater shark announce themselves long before fine details do.

2. Check the head and tail

Hammerheads, threshers, goblin sharks, and wobbegongs all reveal themselves quickly through head or tail shape.

3. Use habitat as a filter

A shark in a surf zone, mangrove creek, reef ledge, or deep pelagic setting belongs to a different shortlist.

Quick field cues

Look atClueExamplesWhy it helps
Overall silhouetteTorpedo-shapedGreat white, shortfin mako, porbeagleFast open-water sharks often have dense, tapered bodies and strong crescent tails.
Overall silhouetteFlattened or carpet-likeSpotted wobbegong, angel sharkBottom-associated sharks often spread out against the seabed instead of carrying a tall cruising profile.
Head shapeHammer or bonnetBonnethead, scalloped hammerhead, great hammerheadHammerheads are first separated by cephalofoil shape and overall size.
Head shapeBlade-like snoutGoblin sharkAn extremely long flattened snout points you toward unusual deepwater species.
TailWhip-long upper lobePelagic thresher, common thresherThresher sharks are easiest to recognize from the tail before anything else.
PatternSpots, saddles, or stripesZebra shark, leopard shark, catsharksBold patterning can matter more than size, especially in smaller benthic sharks.
HabitatShallow bays and estuariesBull shark, bonnethead, blacktip sharkWhere a shark is seen can narrow the list quickly.
HabitatDeep slope or offshore pelagicAmerican pocket shark, goblin shark, frilled sharkDepth and habitat are often the only reliable starting clues for deepwater sharks.

Do not rely on color alone

Patterning helps, but water conditions, age, and distance can wash color cues out. Combine color with shape and habitat.

Juveniles can look surprisingly different

The zebra shark is the classic reminder: juveniles are striped while adults are spotted.

Compare within the right group

Bonnethead versus great hammerhead is a better comparison than bonnethead versus goblin shark. Start with a broad group and narrow from there.

Let depth do some of the work

If a shark comes from deep slope or offshore pelagic habitat, many familiar beach and reef species can be ruled out immediately.

Useful next pages

These are good follow-on species and hubs once you have a rough idea of the body plan.

Comparison hub

Hammerhead Sharks

A field guide to hammerhead identification, range, and species differences.

Deep habitat

Deep-Sea Sharks

A guide to sharks of slopes, offshore basins, and deep pelagic water.

Small shark group

Catsharks

Small, bottom-associated shark profiles with emphasis on catshark body plans and field cues.

Reference

Shark Glossary

Plain-language definitions for common shark anatomy, habitat, and field-guide terms.