







| Kingdom | Phylum | Class | Order | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ANIMALIA | CHORDATA | CHONDRICHTHYES | LAMNIFORMES | ODONTASPIDIDAE |
| Scientific Name: | Odontaspis noronhai | |||||||||
| Species Authority: | (Maul, 1955) | |||||||||
Common Name/s:
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| Synonym/s: |
Carcharias noronhai Maul, 1955
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| Red List Category & Criteria: | Data Deficient ver 3.1 | |||
| Year Assessed: | 2005 | |||
| Assessor/s: | Amorim, A.F., Arfelli, C.A. & Fagundes, L. | |||
| Reviewer/s: | Musick, J.A. & Fowler, S.L. (Shark Red List Authority) | |||
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Justification: This assessment is based on the information published in the 2005 shark status survey (Fowler et al. 2005). The Bigeye Sand Tiger (Odontaspis noronhai) is a rare pelagic deepwater shark that is sparsely but widely distributed in tropical and warm-temperate waters, apparently an inhabitant of continental and insular slopes. It is so infrequently recorded that its biology and population status is unknown. Its life cycle and biology is likely to be similar to that of C. taurus, which has been found to be particularly vulnerable to fisheries, although Odontaspis noronhai matures at an even larger size. |
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| History: |
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| Population Trend: |
Unknown
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| Habitat and Ecology: | Very little information has been collected from the few specimens obtained. The maximum size reported was 367cm total length (TL) (male). A female of 321 cm TL was still immature. The reproduction of this species is presumably similar to that of the better-known laminids (oviphagous, see above). |
| Systems: | Marine |
| Major Threat(s): | Odontaspis noronhai is rarely captured by fishing. All catches of O. noronhai from Brazil were made by tuna longliners based in Santos, except the one from southern Brazil, caught by gillnet (Sadowsky et al. 1984, Araújo and Teixeira 1993, Amorim et al. 1998). Presumably it is taken occasionally by deepwater fisheries with line and net gear, including pelagic gillnets, purse-seines and deep-set longlines. It may live mostly below the depths normally fished by horizontal pelagic longlines and purse-seines and is possibly too large to be a regular bottom or pelagic trawl catch (Compagno 2001). |
| Conservation Actions: | None. |
| Citation: | Amorim, A.F., Arfelli, C.A. & Fagundes, L. 2005. Odontaspis noronhai. In: IUCN 2011. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2011.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 08 February 2012. |
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