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  1. The sharptooth houndshark or spotted gully shark (Triakis megalopterus) is a species of houndshark in the family Triakidae found in shallow inshore waters from southern Angola to South Africa. Favoring sandy areas near rocky reefs and gullies, it is an active-swimming species that

  2. The Spotted Gully Shark ( Triakis megalopterus) is vulnerable because it has a late age-at-maturity and a long gestation period. It is frequently caught by recreational line fishers and a minor bycatch component of commercial beach seine, longline, and trawl fisheries, but is generally released alive and post release mortality is thought to be low.

  3. 10 de nov. de 2022 · Spotted gully sharks have chunky bodies and a short, flat nose with widely spaced nostrils. They are a greyish colour and covered in small black spots which darken with age. It has large fins for its size, especially the dorsal fins with the 1st and 2nd being almost the same size.

  4. The sharptooth houndshark, or spotted gully shark (Triakis megalopterus), is a species of houndshark, belonging to the family Triakidae, found in shallow inshore waters from southern Angola to South Africa.

  5. The sharptooth houndshark, or spotted gully shark (Triakis megalopterus) is a species of houndshark in the family Triakidae found in shallow inshore waters from southern Angola to South Africa. Favoring sandy areas near rocky reefs and gullies, it is an active-swimming species that usually stays close to the bottom.

  6. The Spotted Houndshark (Triakis maculata) is a medium-sized (to 180 cm total length) shark that occurs in the Southeast Pacific from Peru to northern Chile, including the Galápagos Islands (Ecuador). It is demersal on the continental shelf at depths of 10–200 m.

  7. Spotted gully sharks are endemic to the southern African coast, from Walvis Bay in Namibia to Coffee Bay in the Eastern Cape. They occur on sandy and rocky bottoms from the shore to depths of 50m and feed on crustaceans, cephalopods and small fishes.