The Gummy Shark, Mustelus antarcticus, has flat, plate-like teeth for crushing its prey, hence, Gummy Shark.
a gummy shark has no teeth -lachyp Hi its lachyp again using my account booonm i done some research for you they have bony plakes like teeth but the are about half the size of normal teeth :)
Triangular
Are the sandbar shark and the Gummy shark are related yes or no?
The gummy shark, Mustelus antarcticus, is a shark in the family Triakidae. It is a slender grey shark with white spots along the body and flat plate-like teeth for crushing its prey.Of course "gummy shark" can also refer to Gummis Carcharhiniformes, a small, mostly translucent invertebrate. They are typically blue except for their white belly. They are on the same evolutionary branch as the related Gummis Ursis (the gummy bear), Gummis Oligochaeta , (the gummy worm), Gummis Pices (the Swedish Fish), Gummis Pediatricus (the jelly baby) and Gummis Amphibia (the red frog).
The Gummy shark , the grey nurse shark and the sandbar shark location
The Gummy shark is a type of shark found in Australia. They do not really have any natural predators, but are a source of food for humans.
no
The colors of gummy sharks are blue and white.
Depends on what that particular species of Shark prefers to eat.
the difference between the two sharks are as two simple things. one the gummy shark is a bottom feeder and has sand paper teeth the spinner shark in aerodynamically shaped body meant for hunted fast pray like fish and small sharks and the gummy shark in not a fast swimming shark and feeds from the bottom of the see floor for shell fish and slow creatures
they have different DNA