1969
DOI: 10.1590/s0373-55241969000100004
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

First record of broad-snouted seven-gilled shark from Cananéia, coast of Brazil

Abstract: A young female (T o L o 753 mm) of the broadsnouted seven-gilIed shark, Notorynchus pectorosus (GARMAN, 1913), was caught on June, 1968, in a gilI net at depth of 6 m oH Cananéia (25°S, 47°52'W) o The bottom water temperature at the the time of capture was 20 o 6°C. Together with it some other sharks, Rhizopriorwdon porosus Poey, Rho lalandei VaI. , and Carcharhinus porosus (Ranzam), were captured, aII adult males o The species Notorynchus pectorosus is distributed in the P acific and Indian Oceans, as welI as… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
3
0
1

Year Published

1977
1977
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
6
1

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 2 publications
(1 reference statement)
0
3
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Referências -S. Springer, 1966; S. Springer & Sadowsky, 1970. Gênero Scyliorhinus Scyliorhinus retifer (Garman, (Fig. 16) 1881)…”
Section: Gênero Carcharodonunclassified
“…Referências -S. Springer, 1966; S. Springer & Sadowsky, 1970. Gênero Scyliorhinus Scyliorhinus retifer (Garman, (Fig. 16) 1881)…”
Section: Gênero Carcharodonunclassified
“…On the south-western Atlantic it is distributed from Cananéia (25° S, Brazil) to South Patagonia (55° S, Argentina) (Sadowsky, 1970;Guzmán & Campodonico, 1976). This species inhabit mostly coastal and shelf waters (Barnett et al, 2010(Barnett et al, , 2012Williams et al, 2012) and consume a variety of prey including marine mammals, chondrichthyans and teleosts (Lucifora et al, 2005a;Braccini, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…McDonald and Barron, 1868, McCulloch, 1919, Waite, 1921, Scott et ah, 1974, no specimens having ever been recorded from northern waters. J. D. Ogilby (fide Whitley, 1931) states that N. cepedianus does not occur in Queensland waters; the Atlantic Ocean, from Argentina (Lahille, 1928) and Brazil, but not from other parts of the Atlantic (Sadowsky, 1970) and the Indian Ocean (Day, 1878). This report by Day, of a specimen taken off Madras appears to be the most tropical occurrence (about 14°N ) of N. cepedianus.…”
Section: Tmd1292 P9mentioning
confidence: 99%