According to R. Aidan Martin (here:- http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/topics/r_smallest_shark.htm)... "...the smallest known extant shark species appears to be Etmopterus perryi, males of which mature at 16 to 17.5 cm TL* and gravid females have been found at 19 to 20 cm TL (Springer & Burgess 1985). One 19-cm TL specimen of E. perryi was found to contain three 6-cm embryos, each bearing external gill filaments. In comparison, the smallest mature male E. hillianus examined by Schofield & Burgess (1997) was 20 cm TL. Until the discovery of E. perryi, the smallest living shark was widely considered to be Squaliolus laticaudus, males of which mature at about 15 cm TL and females at about 17 to 20 cm TL (Compagno 1984). This and other tiny squaloids are closely rivaled by the carcharhinoid Eridacnis radcliffei, males of which mature by 18 to 19 cm TL, females possibly mature at 15 to 16 cm TL. Etmopterus perryi has the common name Dwarf Lanternfish.
Etmopterus hillianus has the common name Carribean Lanternfish.
Squaliolus laticaudus has the common name Spined Pigmy Shark.
Eridacnis radcliffei has the common name Pygmy Ribbontail Catshark. * I assume 'TL' indicates the total length but cannot confirm this.
The smallest shark in the world would be the dwarf lantern shark measuring at about 8 inches
it is the wobbegong shark it is three foot ten or smaller.
the smallest shark iis roughly about 10cm long.
Actually it`s about 8 in. long. The dwarf lantern shark.
The lantern and the pigmy shark is the smallest shark speacies
Easy Latern Shark
The dog shark is he smallest sharks.
dwarf lantern shark
The smallest known shark, the dwarf lantern shark, is only about 8 inches long. Even so, this little fish has a full set of tiny teeth, the smallest shark teeth there are.
whale shark
From smallest to biggest: Herring Piranha Salmon Shark
lemon shark
fish
3000 pounds
the shark fish
Etmopterus hillianus
the worlds biggest is the whale shark and the smallest is the kandiru
Only 1.2 cm.
the african morepork shark
24m (LARGEST) 9m (smallest)