Yes - but it generally doesn't. A wobbegong is a type of carpet shark found mostly in temperate and tropical waters around Australia and Indonesia. It is commonly found in areas frequented by divers, and will not harm people unless they interfere with it. Wobbegongs do have very shark teeth, and if disturbed, may grab the intruder with their teeth and not let go. No aggressive, unwarranted wobbegong attacks or related fatalities have been recorded.
Japanese wobbegong was created in 1906.
Floral banded wobbegong was created in 2008.
The wobbegong is a species of shark found in Australian waters. Therefore, it has fins.
fins
fins
no a wobegong does not have feathers because it is a shark
It hunts with its vacum mouth
Although there is no clear favorite among the most bizarre looking sharks, Wobbegong sharks rank very highly.
There is a carpet shark called a wobbegong, I promise I'm not having a laugh, look up the wobbegong if you don't believe me. From the shark expert girl.
octopus, crab and crayfish
shark-related
Wobbegong sharks, natve to Australia, have a weight of around 70 kg.