The frilled shark has lived for about 95 million years making it a living fossil.
nobody knows for sure because it lives so far down in the ocean. scientists guess about 25 years
-sharks have cartalige, NOT bones -the myth "a shark can sense a drop of blood in an olympic sized swimming pool", not true. they could smell a drop of fish blood, not human blood...-the dorsal fin on a shark is bent backwards-sharks can have anywhere between 5-7 gills-sharks are attracted to flashy/bright/highly contrasting colors because they remind them of a fish-sharks can range from being able to hold them in your hand, to being over 60 feet long
About 20 years in captivity
An angel shark is approximatley 6.5 feet (2 metres) long.
Sharks generally live from 20 to 30 years. The spiny dogfish shark and the whale shark have been known to live over 100 years.
Different shark species landed on the endangered species list at different times. Some species of critically endangered sharks include the ground shark, dogfish, and the angel shark.
because it takes long time for a frilled shark to complete the baby's maturation
The long jaws of the frilled shark are highly extendable with an extremely wide gape, allowing it to swallow whole prey over half its size. However, the frilled shark can not deliver a strong bite. Frilled sharks eat cephalopods (such as molluscs), osteichthyes (also known as bony fishes), and smaller sharks. The many needle-like teeth of the frilled shark are suited for ripping soft-bodied squid.
since the prehistoric ages about 95 million years ago
no one knows for sure but scientists estimate about 25 years
6'7"
It is around 21 feet for the longest Great White Shark
depends on the lizard.
They are apex predators. The shark is so remarkably designed that it has changed little since the time of the dinosaurs. The speed, teeth, and acute senses make the shark almost without natural competitors in the wild, except for humans. They have been around so long because they are perfectly designed to live for a long time.
In 2007, a fisherman near Tokyo, Japan, told Awashiwa Marine Park officials that he'd just seen a very unusual eel-like creature with needle-sharp teeth. Staff at the park followed the fisherman, who directed them to the 5-foot-long oddity. They caught the creature, which was later identified as a frilled shark. The frilled shark has been called everything from a "sea serpent" to a real-life "Loch Ness Monster" over the years in places where it lives, such as southeast Australia, New Zealand, Southeast Asia, West Africa, Chileand the Caribbean. A more accurate nickname is "the living fossil," since this shark belongs to a primitive species that has changed very little over millions of years. NOTE: copied and pasted from discovery channels website. DISCLAIMER: I do not own this information
Sharks have been around for hundreds of millions of years. This means that their teeth have been available to the fossilization process for a long time.
Frilled sharks have never been kept in captivity. In the wild it is hard to know just how long these fish live. Because they are deep benthic creatures there is little information on lifespan. However, one source (Parker and Parker, 1999) estimates maximum lifespan at 25 years. (Parker and Parker, 1999) http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Chlamydoselachus_anguineus.html they have lived from the prehistoric ages
depends on the lizard.