Great Hammerhead shark

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All animals under go a process of constant change in their physical appearance and in their behaviour. These changes take place over millions of years and the species that survive, do so because throughout their evolution they have perfected certain strategies that have enabled them to develop more successfully in the environment they inhabit. One such case of this successful development is the great hammerhead shark.
The great hammerhead shark, also known as Sphyrna mokarran, is a pelagic shark and is found world wide in tropical warm water regions. Great hammerheads are the largest species of hammerhead shark. The great hammerhead can be distinguished from other hammerheads by the shape of its “hammer” (called the “cephalofoil”), which is wide an almost straight front margin, and by its tall, sickle-shaped first dorsal fin. (Wikipedia, 2014)
The function of the hammer is widely unknown but many theories have been put forward as to its purpose. The most popular are that it helps the great hammerhead to scan larger areas of the ocean floor for food, and it maximises the area of sensory organs known as the ampullae of Lorenzini that can detect chemical, physical and thermal changes in the water, as well as electric fields. (MarineBio.org, 2014)
The body of the great hammerhead is the biggest of the nine species of hammerhead sharks and is coloured grey-brown to olive green on top and off-white below. They have heavily serrated triangular teeth. The length of the great hammerhead can range from four to six meters and weigh between 230 to 450 kg.
The great hammerheads have spectacular vision with their eyes positioned at either end of its widely shaped head. The positioning of the eyes give the hammerhead a panoramic vision and a be...

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...er. like most pelagic sharks, the hammerhead need to keep moving not just to stay away from the bottom but also to help it breath. if a hammerhead stops swimming it will drown. the hammerheads flat head acts as a wing to keep it from the bottom.
The great hammerheads are not known to be territorial but they are instinctively going to do what they can to protect their needs.
One of the major threats to great hammerheads is due to the fishing industry. The hammerhead is prized for its fin for shark fin soup, as well as for its liver oil for vitamins, its skin for leather, and its meat for fishmeal. Catastrophic losses have occurred in the eastern Atlantic where directed fishing is unregulated.

Conclusion:
The great hammerhead is endangered due to human interaction and not due to the fault of their strategies. Their strategies didn't incorporate human interaction.

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