Types of Sharks: 25 Shark Species You Must Know!

Written by Heather Hall
Updated: September 9, 2023
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Key Points:
  • There are between 512-535 types of sharks depending on who you ask.
  • There are 8 orders, or different groups, of sharks. Mackerel shark is the largest order.
  • Several types of sharks have gone extinct and others are endangered.

How many types of sharks are there in the world? Can you name a species of shark belonging to each order?

In the article below we’ll examine the types of sharks (hint: there are 8 main groups and each has significant differences). From there we’ll dive into 25 of the most unique types of sharks on Earth that show just how different (and interesting) sharks can be.

Let’s dive in!

How Many Types of Sharks Are There?

What do tiger sharks eat - feeding a tiger shark

A

tiger

shark being fed by a diver

©Tomas Kotouc/Shutterstock.com

As of late 2021, there are 512 types of sharks, but that number is almost certain to grow. Why is that? Well, there are 23 species of sharks that are waiting on scientific description to be considered “valid.” That brings the likely total of discovered sharks to 535!

Here’s something mind-blowing, if you picked up a book about sharks published in the year 2000, it would list 405 species of sharks. That’s because 107 new shark species have been added since the turn of the century. It’s likely that in the years ahead entirely new sharks will continue being discovered!

Why are we still discovering shark species?

With sharks generally being very large, you might wonder how we’re still discovering so many different sharks. After all, there was a 35-year gap that elapsed between the discovery of the last two carnivorous mammals!

There are a couple of reasons sharks keep getting discovered:

  • This might sound simplistic, but sharks live in water and are just less commonly bumped into. One species of shark, the pondicherry was called the “lost shark” because it hadn’t been seen since the 1970s. However, one was quickly discovered by a TV crew looking for the species at a fish market.
  • Many sharks are deep sea sharks: That is to say, they lived hundreds or even thousands of feet below the surface. Humans only make contact with these species on rare travels that deep or when they wash up on shore.

Now that we know how many shark species exist, let’s dig into our what types of sharks list.

Different Types of Sharks List:

All organisms have scientific names which is unique to each different species. Every species has at least two Latin names. This ensures there is no misidentification. It is no different with different types of sharks. Every shark belongs to the classification Chondrichthyes which basically just identifies them as cartilaginous fish. This means they are fish with internal skeletons made of flexible cartilage rather than bones.

Chondrichthyes consist of two different groups: Holocephali and Elasmobranchii. Each order shows us the biology, physical and behavioral characteristics.

With that said, let’s move onto the different orders or groups of sharks:

A Angelshark
Angelshark

The angelshark’s range has contracted by more than 80% in the past century.

A Bamboo Shark
Bamboo Shark

Can reproduce asexually

A Blacknose Shark
Blacknose Shark

When threatened, Blacknose sharks raise their head, arch their back, and lower their pectoral fins.

A Blacktip Reef Shark
Blacktip Reef Shark

They move in and out of mangrove swamps with the tides.

A Blacktip Shark 
Blacktip Shark 

One of the most commonly-encountered sharks

A Bonnethead Shark
Bonnethead Shark

Bonnetheads are the only hammerhead sharks that use their pectoral fins to swim.

A Bronze Whaler Shark
Bronze Whaler Shark

The Bronze Whaler Sharks only hunt in large groups.

A Bull Shark
Bull Shark

Unpredictable and aggressive temperament!

A Caribbean Reef Shark
Caribbean Reef Shark

These sharks are a big part of ecotoursim in the Caribbean.

A Cookiecutter Shark
Cookiecutter Shark

The cookiecutter shark takes its name because it leaves a cookie-shaped bite hole in its prey.

A Crocodile Shark
Crocodile Shark

Responsible for damaging fiber optic cables laid by AT&T in 1985

A Dusky Shark
Dusky Shark

The Dusky Shark sometimes eats trash discarded by humans.

A Frilled Shark
Frilled Shark

Frilled Sharks got their name from the six rows of gills on their throat that look like ruffled collars.

A Galapagos Shark
Galapagos Shark

Galapagos sharks are cannibalistic and sometimes eat their young, so the pups stay away from the adults in shallow water.

A Goblin Shark
Goblin Shark

Goblin Sharks are called a living fossil because their family, Mitsukurinidae, can be traced back 125 million years.

A Great White Shark
Great White Shark

Can grow to more than 8 meters long!

A Greenland Shark
Greenland Shark

This shark has the longest lifespan of any vertebrate.

A Grey Reef Shark
Grey Reef Shark

One of the most common shark species!

A Hammerhead Shark
Hammerhead Shark

Found in coastal waters around the world!

A Horn Shark
Horn Shark

Endemic to the Californian coast!

A Leopard Shark
Leopard Shark

Leopard Sharks have teeth with three points.

A Megalodon
Megalodon

The largest shark to ever live!

A Megamouth Shark
Megamouth Shark

Swims with its mouth open to capture prey

A Nurse Shark
Nurse Shark

Commonly found in Central American waters!

A Pacific Sleeper Shark
Pacific Sleeper Shark

In 2015, a Pacific Sleeper Shark was filmed living underneath an active volcano near the Solomon Islands. This shark is able to survive in waters with very high temperatures and acidity!

A Porbeagle Shark
Porbeagle Shark

The porbeagle is one of the few sharks that jumps out of the water

A Pygmy Shark
Pygmy Shark

Pygmy sharks underbelly glows to attract prey that swims beneath it.

A Pyjama Shark
Pyjama Shark

Pyjama Sharks like to swim in shallow inshore waters.

A Reef Shark
Reef Shark

Grey reef sharks can give birth without males

A Salmon Shark
Salmon Shark

Salmon sharks are related to Great Whites.

A Sand Tiger Shark
Sand Tiger Shark

The sand tiger is the shark most commonly seen in aquariums.

A Shortfin Mako Shark
Shortfin Mako Shark

Shortfin Mako sharks can jump 20 feet above the water!”

A Silky Shark
Silky Shark

Has an extremely acute sense of hearing

A Sixgill shark
Sixgill shark

The sixgill shark has six pairs of gills instead of the normal five

A Sleeper Shark
Sleeper Shark

The Greenland shark is one of the longest living vertebrates in the world.

A Spinner Shark
Spinner Shark

Can have up to 20 babies

A Spiny Dogfish
Spiny Dogfish

Found in ocean waters worldwide!

A Thresher Shark
Thresher Shark

Thresher Sharks have a distinctive, thresher-like tail.

A Viper Shark (dogfish)
Viper Shark (dogfish)

Most data on these fish is based on observations near Japan.

A Xenacanthus
Xenacanthus

Smal eel-like ancient shark

A Zebra Shark
Zebra Shark

Can get to be 30 years old in the wild!

What are the 8 Groups of Sharks (Orders)?

There are sharks of all shapes and sizes, like this small catshark!

©iStock.com/atese

Before we dive into 25 of the most unique shark species in the world, let’s examine the eight different groups of sharks. All shark species belong to each of them. Learning all eight of these categories will enable you to be familiar with how scientists group different types of sharks!

1. Dogfish sharks

Greenland shark near the ocean ground, Somniosus microcephalus - shark with the longest known lifespan of all vertebrate species.

Greenland sharks are a type of

dogfish shark

and the oldest living vertebrate!

©Dotted Yeti/Shutterstock.com

Shark breeds in this group include gulper, kite-fin, dogfish, lantern sharks, and sleeper sharks. Some notable species in the dogfish order include:

  • Greenland sharks: Which can live up to 500 years.
  • Cookiecutter sharks: Take small bites out of their prey leaving unique scarring.
  • Ninja lantern shark: A shark that glows in the dark.

In total there are 131 types of different sharks such as the dogfish, making it one of the most diverse types of sharks. In fact, 24% of all shark species belong to this order! It is likely more dogfish sharks will continue being discovered as well. Most lantern sharks live deep in the ocean. For example, the ninja lanterns hark was just discovered in 2015!

2. Cow and frilled sharks

Biggest Shark: Bluntnose Sixgill

A bluntnose sixgill shark

©NOAA Ocean Explorer from USA / CC BY-SA 2.0 – License

There are only seven species of cow and frilled sharks, making this the smallest order containing just 1% of total shark species. Cow and filled sharks include:

  • Frilled shark: A “living fossil” with very primitive features. It is somewhat reminiscent of an eel and is capable of growing over two meters in length. It loves to eat cuttlefish, octopuses, smaller sharks, and squid.
  • South African frilled shark: A newly discovered species that was just described in 2009.
  • Bluntnose sixgill shark: Commonly known as the “cow shark.” One of the largest shark species, capable of growing to 20 feet in length!

3. Sawsharks

Types of Sharks - Old Drawing of Sawshark

A drawing of a sawshark from the late 19th century

©Morphart Creation/Shutterstock.com

Only slightly larger than cow and frilled sharks with a total of 8 species, sawsharks have snouts that look like… Well, saws! Shark breeds in this category are different from sawfish. One notable difference is that few sawshark species don’t exceed more than 5 feet in length while the largest sawfish types of sharks can grow to 23 feet long!

Sawshark species include:

  • Bahamas sawshark: A sawshark that lives in deeper waters than other species, reaching 1,000 meters below the ocean surface.
  • Longnose sawshark: Its saw-like snout is 30% of its total body length!

4. Angel Sharks

Types of Shark - Angel Shark

A close-up of an angel shark!

©LuisMiguelEstevez/Shutterstock.com

There are 22 different types of sharks in the species of angel sharks that occupy a single family and genus. Unfortunately, angel sharks are among the most endangered sharks in the world. They live along the bottom of the ocean close to coastlines, which means they’re often caught as a byproduct of fishing nets.

Some notable types of angel sharks:

5. Bullhead Sharks

Types of Shark - Horn Shark - Heterodontus francisci, Horn Shark on a Palos Verdes reef

A horn shark

©Philip Garner/Shutterstock.com

Smaller types of sharks with just 10 species (9 described). Bullhead sharks are very distinctive and can trace their lineage back to the Jurassic Era when gigantic dinosaur sauropods like Brontosaurus ruled the land! Bullhead shark species include:

  • Horn shark: Common along the Pacfific Coast from California to South America. Horn sharks use suction to feed on a diet that mostly mullosks and crustaceans.
  • Zebra bullhead shark: One of two sharks to start with a “Z.” If anyone ever asks you to name a shark that starts with “Z,” you’re now prepared!

6. Mackerel Sharks

Great white shark in the ocean

The most famous mackerel shark of all – a great white shark in the ocean

©Jsegalexplore/Shutterstock.com

The type of shark that includes Jaws himself! Mackerel sharks include great whites, thresher sharks, and sand sharks. Interestingly, while this order contains hunters like great whites, it also includes basking sharks which are filter-feeding giants that don’t hunt prey. In addition, this type of shark has some very odd-looking additions like the goblin shark.

Some mackerel sharks you need to know are:

  • Great white shark: The largest predatory shark in the world, the great white is an apex predator in oceans across the world
  • Shortfin mako: The world’s fastest shark! Recent tests showed the shark could burst up to 46 miles per hour.
  • Goblin sharks: Some of the most unique looking sharks in the world (check out a picture later in this article!). The goblin shark is rarely sighted and has a long snout that looks like a sword!
  • Salmon sharks: Can use their body as a heater to thrive in extremely cold waters.

7. Carpet Sharks

Biggest Fish: Whale Shark

The largest carpet shark of all, a whale shark!

©Lindsey Lu/Shutterstock.com

There are 45 different carpet sharks, and they range dramatically in size. This type of shark includes the whale shark, which is the largest fish in the world. It also includes different types of sharks which are smaller such as nurse sharks, bamboo sharks, and wobbegongs.

Carpet sharks include:

  • Whale shark: The largest shark species in the world and capable of reaching more than 60 feet in length!
  • Epaulette shark: A species capable of walking on land when it gets stranded in tidal pools.
  • Ornate wobbegong: Lives in Australian waters and has some of the most distinctive camouflage among shark species.

8. Ground Sharks

What Do Hammerhead Sharks Eat - A Hammerhead Up Close

Ground sharks encompass more than half of sharks, including hammerheads!

©Martin Voeller/Shutterstock.com

The largest order of sharks with 296 species, ground sharks cover a tremendous diversity of species. In fact, 55% of all shark spies are ground sharks! For example, there are more than 140 species of catsharks (yes there are cat and dog sharks!) spread across this type of shark. Ground sharks also include hammerhead species, tiger sharks, and reef sharks.

  • Tiger sharks: The second largest predator shark behind the great white, tiger sharks are voracious hunters that are known to eat just about any prey they can find!
  • Atlantic ghost catshark: The third smallest shark species in the world, Atlantic ghost catsharks measure less than 10 inches in length.
  • Bull sharks: A notoriously aggressive species of sharks that can live in both freshwater and saltwater.

25 Shark Species You Must Know!

Now that know the 8 types of sharks and which sharks belong in each, let’s dive into 25 of the most fascinating species of sharks. Each entry on our shark species list has something incredibly unique, so you won’t want to miss reading about it!

Great White Shark

Cage Diving with a Great White Shark

Can you imagine coming face-to-face with a great white that’s 20-feet long?

©Stefan Pircher/Shutterstock.com

What other shark receives so much fascination as the great white? Great white sharks are the most aggressive sharks in the world, with 333 attacks on humans since tracking began in 1958. Yet, it’s important to remember that cows kill 20 people annually while great whites have killed four Americans in the past decade. The great white shark is an apex predator of the seas, rivaled only by the likes of killer whales.

Great Hammerhead

Great Hammerhead Shark in the Bahamas

Great Hammerhead Shark

in the Bahamas

©Brent Barnes/Shutterstock.com

There are 9 hammerhead sharks in the genus Sphyrna, but the great hammerhead is the largest on its shark species list. The unique shape of hammerheads is called a ‘cephalofoil,’ and it gives them 360-degree vision and superior depth perception. It can also be used as a weapon. Hammerheads will use their heads as a hammering ram to pin stingrays – among their favorite foods to eat – into the ground.

Tiger Sharks

Biggest Shark: Tiger

A lady diver with a Tiger Shark. Tiger sharks may be the only sharks that regularly hunt sea turtles.

©Tomas Kotouc/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Ground shark
  • Wild Tiger Shark Fact: Tiger sharks are very food motivated. Scientists tracking shark movement noticed while all other sharks fled a hurricane in 2017, tiger sharks moved into the hurricane hoping for easy meals!

If it weren’t for great whites, tiger sharks would likely fill in for ‘Jaws.‘ The species is quite large with the biggest tiger sharks weighing up to 1,700 pounds. In addition, they’re the second most aggressive sharks after the great white. Tiger sharks eat just about anything. Analysis of their stomachs has found humpback whales, dolphins, sea turtles, and even antelopes.

Spinner Shark

Spinner shark swimming in the deep ocean.

Spinner shark swimming in the deep ocean.

©Chokyky/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Ground shark
  • Wild Spinner Shark Fact: Spinner sharks can rotate up to three times after jumping out of the water. They are the gymnasts of the shark world!

Spinner sharks are most notable for their jumping behavior. The spinner shark hunts by spinning around rapidly. While spinning, it blasts through groups of fish and snap their jaws in all directions. After blasting through groups of fishes it hits the surface of the air, where it performs a series of spins that would make even world-class gymnasts green with envy!

Bluntnose Sixgill Shark

Biggest Shark: Bluntnose Sixgill

Sixgill shark (Hexanchus griseus) seen while exploring Santa Rosa Reef, south of Guam, during the first dive of the Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas expedition.

©NOAA Ocean Explorer from USA / CC BY-SA 2.0 – License

  • Type of Sharks: Cow and frilled sharks
  • Wild Bluntnose Shark Fact: Can reach up to 20 feet long, about the same length as a great white shark!

Sixgill sharks are among the most prehistoric sharks in the world. Scientists trace their lineage back more than 200 million years! Bluntnose sixgill sharks are often called “cow sharks” because of their sluggish movements and large size. However, they can be quite quick and aggressive when threatened. For example, when the documentary Planet Earth 2 found a group of bluntnose sixgills feeding on a whale carcass, the group of sharks attacked the filming submarine believing it was competition for the whale feast.

Megamouth Shark

Biggest Shark: Megamouth

Megamouth shark, Megachasma pelagios, at Toba Aquarium, Japan

©Opencage / CC BY-SA 2.5 – License

  • Type of Sharks: Mackerel sharks
  • Wild Megamouth Shark Fact: Megamouth sharks are massive – and distinctive looking – but the first one was seen in 1976. It’s almost beyond belief that a creature this size could still be unknown, but many deep-water animals remain unknown to humankind.

Megamouth sharks are deep-sea sharks that are rarely spotted. They’re 13 feet long and possess something you might not associate with sharks: glowing pores around their mouths! Scientists believe these pores attract krill and other small organisms that megamouth sharks eat through filter feeding. Amazingly, this unique shark belongs to the same type of shark as great whites!

Porbeagle Shark

porbeagle

A caught porbeagle shark.

©NOAA, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons – License

  • Type of Sharks: Mackerel sharks
  • Wild Porbeagle Shark Fact: Porbeagle sharks can turn their bodies into heaters!

Porbeagle sharks live in the frigid waters of the North Atlantic and the Antarctic. As you can imagine, water this cold requires unique adaptations from a shark. In the case of the porbeagle, they can heat their bodies to 14 to 18 degrees Fahrenheit above the surrounding water!

Bonnethead Shark

The bonnethead shark or shovelhead, Sphyrna tiburo, stranded on a sandy beach.

The bonnethead shark or shovelhead, Sphyrna tiburo, stranded on a sandy beach.

©IrinaK/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Ground sharks
  • Wild Bonnethead Shark Fact: Bonnethead sharks were the first-ever shark scientists comfirmed as omnivores!

In 2018 scientific research found that 60% of the bonnethead shark’s diet was seagrass. That makes the bonnethead shark the first (known) omnivorous shark that eats a diet equal in plants and meats. Bonnethead sharks are also the smallest species of hammerheads.

Greenland Shark

Greenland shark encounter, Somniosus microcephalus, deep sea shark species

Greenland shark encounter, Somniosus microcephalus, deep-sea shark species

©Dotted Yeti/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of sharks: Dogfish shark
  • Wild Greenland Shark Fact: Greenland sharks are the oldest living vertebrates on Earth! They can potentially live up to 500 years!

Greenland sharks belong to a family known as ‘sleeper sharks‘ that are known for having low activity and being extremely slow. Not very exciting, right? Well, Greenland sharks are also notable for getting very big. They can reach 24 feet in length, a size greater than the longest great white shark. Also, Greenland sharks might live more than 500 years! Scientists studying Greenland sharks found that one shark was between 272 and 512 years old. Greenland shark meat is also toxic but is eaten in Iceland. To eat it, the shark meat must be buried in the ground for long periods. Finally, Greenland sharks eat just about anything. Even moose have been found in their stomachs.

So there you have it, sleeper sharks like the Greenland shark might sound boring, but that is one interesting shark!

Blue Shark

Though not aggressive, blue sharks are one of the fastest fish and sometimes referred to as the "wolves of the sea," perhaps because they travel at such high speeds.

Though not aggressive, blue sharks are sometimes referred to as the “wolves of the sea,” perhaps because they travel at such high speeds.

©Martin Prochazkacz/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Ground shark
  • Wild Blue Shark Fact: Female blue shark skin is twice as thick as males so they survive bites during mating.

Requiem sharks are a large family of sharks that are effective hunters. This family includes tiger sharks, reef sharks, bull sharks, and yes, the blue shark. Requiem sharks are notable for giving live birth and being migratory. Blue sharks reach up to 10 feet in length and have torpedo-like bodies that help them reach impressive bursts of speed.

Horn Shark

A juvenile horn shark rests motionless on the bottom of the sea floor.

A horn shark on the ocean floor.

©Joe Belanger/Shutterstock.com

  • Types of Sharks: Bullhead shark
  • Wild Horn Shark Fact: Horn sharks can pop out their jaws to use as a chisel on mollusks attached to surfaces!

Horn sharks are one of the few species inside the bullhead shark order. The species can protrude its jaw 15% the length of its head in 1/50th of a second, this action allows it to carve off prey that’s attached to surfaces. This adaptation has served horn sharks well, as they can trace their lineage to the Jurassic Period when dinosaurs dominated the planet. This makes bullhead sharks some of the most prehistoric sharks still alive today.

Nurse Shark

What do nurse sharks eat - nurse shark face

A close-up of the nurse shark ‘barbells’

©Maui Topical Images/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Carpet sharks
  • Wild Nurse Shark Fact: Nurse sharks are the vacuum cleaners of the sea

Nurse sharks lay along the ocean floor near beaches. They’re mostly harmless to humans but can get quite big (more than 10 feet in length)! Nurse sharks eat in an interesting way, they have “barbels” on their faces that are similar to catfish that are used to smell for food. They then swim – or even walk by using their fins – along the ocean floor and “vacuum” up prey into their mouths.

The species has a special cavity in their mouths that allows for incredible suction. Once prey enters their mouth their teeth are specialized to crush up shells of mollusks and crustaceans. As we said, they’re the vacuum cleaners of the sea!

Basking Shark

Biggest Fish in the World: Basking Shark

Basking Shark with mouth open

©Martin Prochazkacz/Shutterstock.com

  • Types of Sharks: Mackeral sharks
  • Wild Basking Shark Fact: They can reach up to 32,000 pounds in weight!

Basking sharks are gigantic, the second largest species of shark (we’ll get to number one shortly). While their average length is closer to 26 feet when fully grown, the largest ever basking shark reached 40 feet long and had an estimated weight of 32,000 pounds.

That’s one big fish! If you see a picture of a basking shark and think they look scarier than they are in reality (they are harmless to humans and filter feeders), the basking shark is a mackerel shark and closely related to great whites, which helps explain its appearance.

Cookiecutter Shark

Cookiecutter Shark

Cookiecutter Shark close-up

©Jennifer Strotman / public domain – License

  • Type of Sharks: Dogfish shark
  • Wild Cookiecutter Shark Fact: They’re parasitic sharks that carve out cookie dough-shaped bites from animals they prey on. Yeah, this is one weird shark species!

We’re about to get into some downright weird shark species, so it’s fitting we start with the cookiecutter shark. Never heard of them before? Cookiecutter sharks spend their days up to two miles deep in the ocean and migrate to the surface at night. They’re small, measuring less than two feet in length.

Now, here’s where they get so weird. Cookiecutter sharks look for prey and use suction to attach to them. Once they’ve attached themselves, they bite in with teeth that measure two to three inches in length and pop out a chunk of meat that looks like a scoop of cookie dough! Their teeth are powerful as well, cookiecutter sharks have forced nuclear submarines back to base after they disabled cables and sonar domes with their bites!

There are plenty of other weird aspects of this shark from their appearance to the fact they glow for hours after they die. Yet, it’s their cookie dough-shaped bite that stands out the most!

Goblin Shark

goblin shark fish realistic illustration

goblin shark fish realistic illustration

©Juliana Motzko/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Mackerel sharks
  • Wild Goblin Shark Fact: Their jaws shoot out of their mouth like the creature in Alien

With a name like goblin sharks, you know we’re sticking with a weird species. First of all, just look at goblin sharks, they have a sword-like object sticking out of their heads. Goblin sharks look so unique because they’re the only surviving species of an ancient type of shark. Goblin sharks are very large with a recent female catch having reached close to 20 feet in length.

Little is known about the species as they live in the deep ocean, but their jaws are one of their most incredible adaptations. Essentially, its jaws rapidly extend forward like a catapult, extending out from its body 2X to 10X further than other shark species. Even if you’re trying to visualize what this looks like, think about the creature from Alien.

Bull Shark

Bull shark facts - a group of bull sharks

A group of bull sharks.

©Katja Tsvetkova/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Ground shark
  • Wild Bull Shark Fact: Bullsharks can swim upstream across rapids – like salmon – to be able to reach freshwater lakes!

Bull sharks are aggressive sharks that will go literally anywhere for food. Such as:

  • Bull sharks commonly live in a lake in Nicaragua that they have to jump up rapids (like salmon fighting a river to spawn) to get to.
  • They’ve been seen 2,500 miles up upriver looking for food!
  • In 2010, after the city of Brisbane was flooded they were spotted through city streets.

Bull sharks have an adaptation that allows them to live in both freshwater and saltwater, and as you can see from the examples above; they take advantage of it! They’re also extremely aggressive sharks and have even been spotted squaring off against hippos!

Whale Shark

Heaviest Animals: Plankton Feeding Sharks

A large Whale Shark swimming in shallow water over a tropical coral reef. Each whale shark has its own unique pattern of spots, much like human fingerprints.

©Richard Whitcombe/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Carpet shark
  • Wild Whale Shark Fact: Whale sharks are big, you probably know that. But here’s just how big they are, their eggs are twice the size of ostrich eggs!

The largest-ever whale shark measured 62 feet long, it was the size of a bowling alley! Because they’re so enormous, whale sharks also take a long time to reach sexual maturity. Males area about 25 years old before they’re able to reproduce, and may live to 130 years of age! Despite their massive size, whale sharks are harmless to humans. They filter feed and have more than 3,000 teeth that crush up krill, eggs, and larvae.

Frilled Shark

Frilled shark (Chlamydoselachus anguineus)

Frilled shark (Chlamydoselachus anguineus)

©OpenCage / CC BY-SA 2.5 – License

  • Type of Sharks: Cow and frilled sharks
  • Wild Frill Shark Fact: Here’s how rare frilled sharks are, the first video of one wasn’t recorded until 2004!

Frilled sharks are another “living fossil” species of sharks that looks more like an eel than most modern sharks. Like cookiecutter sharks, they migrate to the ocean surface to hunt at night and spend their days deep below the ocean’s surface. One interesting fact about the frilled shark is that their gestation period may be up to 3.5 years long, or more than four times the length of a human!

Sand Tiger Shark

Sand tiger shark or grey nurse shark or spotted ragged-tooth shark, Carcharias taurus, Cape Infanta, South Africa, Indian Ocean

Sand tiger shark or grey nurse shark or spotted ragged-tooth shark, Carcharias taurus, Cape Infanta, South

Africa

, Indian Ocean

©Alessandro De Maddalena/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Mackerel sharks
  • Wild Sand Tiger Shark Fact: Can gulp air from the surface which allows them to “ambush” prey in environments like shipwrecks!

Here’s what’s interesting about sand tiger sharks, they can hunt, unlike other sharks. Most species of sharks need to move to breathe. That is to say if they stop swimming they perish! Sand tiger sharks have an adaptation that allows them to gulp air at the surface, which allows them to lay motionless. This makes sand tiger sharks especially effective hunters in habitats like shipwrecks since they can lay motionless in wait and leap at prey when they pass by!

Thresher Sharks

Longest Tail: The Common Thresher Shark

The most notable feature of the thresher shark is the long, whip-like upper lobe of its tail, which is known as the caudal fin.

©Shane Gross/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Mackerel sharks
  • Wild Thresher Shark Fact: A tail as long as their body that they use to whip prey!

Thresher sharks have one defining feature: a tail that’s the same size as their body! They use this tail to “whip” at prey, shocking them and providing an easy meal. It was recently discovered that thresher sharks migrate to spots where millions of fish congregate off reefs. With huge “bait balls” of fish, the thresher shark’s whip is especially effective!

Shortfin Mako Shark

The mako shark is one of the fastest fish, and it is considered dangerous to humans because of its speed — it can attack aggressively and quickly. It has even been known to "jump" into fishing boats!

The

mako shark

is considered dangerous to humans because of its speed — it can attack aggressively and quickly. It has even been known to “jump” into fishing boats!

©wildestanimal/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Mackerel sharks
  • Wild Shortfin Mako Shark Fact: Their bullet-shaped body allows them to travel up to 46 miles per hour

Shortfin makos are built for one thing: speed! The sharks aren’t small, they can reach more than 14 feet in length and the largest shortfin mako ever recorded weighed 1,300 pounds! Shortfin makos have been recorded hitting speeds of up to 46 miles per hour, which makes them the fastest shark species in the world. In addition to being built for speed, they’re also an extremely intelligent species with a large brain-to-body ratio.

Epaulette Shark

Shark that Walks on Land - Epaulette Shark

The epaulette shark can walk on land!

©slowmotiongli/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Carpet sharks
  • Wild Epaulette Shark Fact: They can walk on land!

The craziest thing about epaulette sharks is pretty simple, they can walk on land! The species isn’t especially large, reaching a bit less than four feet in length at maturity. Epaulette sharks prefer hunting near land in tidal pools, which leads to them often being stranded. To avoid death when the tide moves out too quickly epaulettes have developed a unique adaptation that allows them to slow their breath and heart rate and survive for up to an hour while they walk back to the water! Yes, this truly is a shark that can walk (briefly) on land.

Types of Sharks that Have Gone Extinct

Sharks first evolved around 450 million years ago and have survived several mass extinctions that brought down other dominant types of animals.

(Interesting fact, about 19 million years ago sharks almost went the way of the dinosaurs. 90% of them rapidly died off and scientists aren’t exactly sure why!)

No look at the types of sharks in the world would be complete without an examination into types of sharks that have gone extinct. Let’s take a look at three species you want to get the full details on!

Megalodon

Megalodon vs. Mosasaurus - Megalodon Bite

Megalodon

looked like a massive great white shark

©Gil Cohiba/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: Ancestor to mackerel sharks
  • Wild Megalodon Shark Fact: Its bite force was estimated to be five times more powerful than a Tyrannosaurus Rex!

Let’s face it, no list looking at types of sharks would be complete with megalodon! The shark was big, with some estimates of its size reaching between 20 times to 50 times the size of the largest great white in the world today when measured by weight! The absence of megalodon is likely the reason that whale species today – like the blue whale – have evolved to become so large. Simply put, megalodon was the apex predator of the oceans for around 20 million years and its absence still hasn’t been replaced!

Stethacanthus

Sharks that went extinct - Stethacanthus

S

tethacanthus

was one of the most interesting sharks to ever live!

©Zero Smany/Shutterstock.com

  • Type of Sharks: More closely related to chimaeras than sharks
  • Wild Stethacanthus Shark Fact: Just look at the drawing of it above, it had an anvil on its head!

Stethacanthus died out around 300 million years ago, but it was certainly one of the most unique sharks to ever live. What was the purpose of its anvil? it is uncertain. It may have been used for mating, or to scare away predators. Regardless, this is one shark species that looked unique!

Pondicherry Shark

  • Type of Sharks: Ground sharks
  • Wild Pondicherry Shark Fact: Pondicherries were thought to have been extinct since the 1970s before one was found in 2019.

Finally, we’ll conclude our look at the type of sharks with a look at Pondicherry sharks. Today, about 2.4% of sharks are considered critically endangered, 3.2% are endangered, and 10.3% are vulnerable. The population of many sharks have crashed in recent decades and they continue to face threats such as overfishing.

The Pondicherry shark was thought extinct for nearly four decades before one was recently found at a fish market. While sharks don’t face the same rate of extinction as other mammals, their population continues to drop. If measures aren’t taken to continue protecting species, other species beyond the Pondicherry may face the prospect of extinction.

Fun Facts About Sharks

  • Sharks have small black spots close to the nose, eyes, and mouth which are special electroreceptor organs that help the shark sense electromagnetic fields and temperature shifts in the ocean.
  • While shark skin may look smooth and slippery, its texture is actually similar to sandpaper.
  • If sharks get flipped upside down (such as by a wildlife specialist), they go into tonic immobility, a trance-like state.
  • Researchers can determine the age of sharks by counting the rings found on their vertebrae.
  • Sharks have extremely good eyesight, able to see colors, see at night, and also in dark-lighted areas.
  • Sharks have skeletal cartilage instead of bones.

Types of Sharks List:

Here is a summary of the different types of sharks and the groups in which they are classified.

RankSHARK NAMEORDER OR GROUP CLASSIFICATION
1Great White SharkMackerel Shark
2Great HammerheadGround Shark
3Tiger SharkGround Shark
4Spinner SharkGround Shark
5Bluntnose Sixgill SharkCow and Frilled Shark
6Megamouth SharkMackerel Shark
7Porbeagle SharkMackerel Shark
8Bonnethead SharkGround Shark
9Greenland SharkDogfish Shark
10Blue SharkGround Shark
11Horn SharkBullhead Shark
12Nurse SharkCarpet Shark
13Basking SharkMackerel Shark
14Cookiecutter SharkDogfish Shark
15Goblin SharkMackerel Shark
16Bull SharkGround Shark
17Whale SharkCarpet Shark
18Frilled SharkCow and Frilled Shark
19Sand Tiger SharkMackerel Shark
20Thresher SharkMackerel Shark
21Shortfin Mako SharkMackerel Shark
22Epaulette SharkCarpet Shark
23Megalodon SharkEXTINCT
24Stethacanthus SharkEXTINCT
25Pondicherry SharkEXTINCT

The photo featured at the top of this post is © Michael Rosskothen/Shutterstock.com


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About the Author

Heather Hall is a writer at A-Z Animals, where her primary focus is on plants and animals. Heather has been writing and editing since 2012 and holds a Bachelor of Science in Horticulture. As a resident of the Pacific Northwest, Heather enjoys hiking, gardening, and trail running through the mountains with her dogs.

FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) 

What unusual environments do sharks live in?

Sharks can be found across nearly every environment on Earth. In the Arctic, Greenland sharks have adapted to bitterly cold waters. In fact, sharks can even be found in volcanoes! Researchers in the Solomon Islands were recently studying an underwater volcano and found two kinds of sharks living in its caldera!

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us? Contact the AZ Animals editorial team.