they go to a warmer place to breed
Hammerhead sharks migrate so they can move to warmer climate to breed.
All Hammerhead sharks migrate to warmer waters in the winter
they go to a warmer place to breed
They go to warmer waters to breed.
No they do the same thing, they migrate to warmer waters in the winter and the opposite in the summer
Well there are 9 different species of Hammerhead Sharks : Winghead shark Scalloped bonnethead White fin hammerhead Scalloped hammerhead Scoophead Great hammerhead Bonnethead Smalleye hammerhead Smooth hammerhead The Great and the Scalloped hammerhead are listed on the World Conservation Union's 2008 Red List as endangered, whereas the Smalleye hammerhead is listed as vulnerable. As for the other species they are not endangered.
Well there are 9 different species of Hammerhead Sharks : Winghead shark Scalloped bonnethead White fin hammerhead Scalloped hammerhead Scoophead Great hammerhead Bonnethead Smalleye hammerhead Smooth hammerhead The Great and the Scalloped hammerhead are listed on the World Conservation Union's 2008 Red List as endangered, whereas the Smalleye hammerhead is listed as vulnerable. As for the other species they are not endangered.
The Hammerhead shark is not a mammal.
The most commonly known "hammerhead" in nature would be the hammerhead shark.
Bull Sharks migrate into the fresh water rivers and channels to give birth. Giving birth in fresh water prevents other sharks from eating their young. Bulls are one of the only sharks that can live in either salt or fresh water, giving them the ability to migrate into the fresh waters leaving the threat from other sharks behind
Hammerhead - film - was created in 1968.
Hammerhead Networks's population is 85.