Hammerhead sharks are frequently featured in aquariums due to their distinctive appearance and unique behavior, which attract visitors and enhance educational experiences. Their wide-set eyes and unusual head shape make them visually striking, while their social habits provide opportunities for engaging exhibits. Additionally, many aquariums participate in conservation efforts and research programs involving hammerheads, helping to raise awareness about their ecological importance and the threats they face in the wild.
Hammerhead sharks migrate so they can move to warmer climate to breed.
Hammerhead sharks gather in large shoals during the day, then hunt alone at night. so i would say no
Because they are so popular for aquariums AF
Hammerhead sharks have 38 to 46 teeth. However, they have more than one row of teeth so they can have over 100.
All sharks have a spine, so all are vertebrates.
Hammerhead sharks live under-water, which is notorious for lacking any kind of weather what-so-ever.
Yes, they are aerobic organisms so they require oxygen.
So it is easier for it to hunt and stay hidden.
As long as you keep alot of other fish in there too, so the sharks don't go hungry
so they could kill the animals
There are 9 known species of hammerhead shark, they are all predators. They eat many things including other sharks and they have been know to be canabalistic, so in a sense a hammerhead shark may fall prey to it's own species.
Most sharks live alone but hammerhead like a crowd. They gather together in huge groups called schools in certain times of the year to breed. Because the schools are so huge the hammerheads a big variety.