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Not to be confused with the Scalloped Hammerhead Shark. Not to be confused with the Scalloped Hammerhead.

The Great Hammerhead Shark (Sphyrna mokarran), largely known in-game simply as the Hammerhead Shark, is a large cartilaginous fish. It is an adoptable animal in Zoo Tycoon.

Description[]

The Great Hammerhead is the largest of nine species of hammerhead shark, attaining an average length of 4.6m (15ft) in length, although large individuals have reached 6.1m (20ft). Hammerhead sharks are identified by their flattened and extended head, known as a cephalofoil, which gives the head a hammer-like shape. The Great Hammerhead can in turn be distinguished by its largely straight, almost T-shaped cephalofoil. The purpose for a hammerhead's cephalofoil is not entirely understood, but it is believed it gives the shark enhanced vision and also allows it to detect prey. All sharks feature sensory pores on their heads which detect electrical signals given off by prey and being spread across a wide area allows the hammerhead to find food more effectively.

The Great Hammerhead lives in tropical and temperate waters worldwide, close to the equator. It preys on fish and invertebrates, including other sharks, but has a preference for stingrays. Hammerheads have been observed using their cephalofoil to pin the rays down before eating them. Like all hammerheads, females give birth to live young and may have over 50 pups. The Great Hammerhead is now heavily threatened in the wild, as it is heavily fished for its fins.

Zoo Tycoon[]

The Great Hammerhead Shark is an adoptable animal in Zoo Tycoon and was added as part of the Marine Mania expansion pack. In Freeform mode, it is one of six marine animals to be available at the start of the game.

Like all Marine Mania animals, the great hammerhead is an Aquatic animal and uses the Sunken Ship shelter but can also use the Seafloor Cave. It can be safely mixed with the Shortfin Mako Shark, Tiger Shark and the Whale Shark.

The hammerhead shark's favourite foliage is Sea Grass and requires a large amount of rocks in its tank. To max out the animal's habitat suitability, the player must fill at least a few tiles with small rocks before reaching the rock limit, as the player can place 4 small rocks on one tile, increasing the amount of suitability the rocks give. When using only medium rocks, the hammerhead shark's habitat suitability will cap at 98%.

The hammerhead shark is a difficult animal to keep, as their hunger depletes rapidly and they don't typically fill their hunger bar all the way when feeding, making them prone to starving.

Animal Facts

The great hammerhead shark, or Sphyrna mokarran, is the largest of the nine species of hammerheads. Hammerheads are a distinct group of sharks with a wide, flat, almost rectangular head with eyes at the sides. The great hammerhead is one of the largest of the predatory sharks. The great hammerhead averages eleven feet in length, but has been known to grow up to 20 feet long, weighing anywhere from 500 to 1000 pounds. The first dorsal fin is very tall and pointed. This is the triangular fin associated with sharks by most people. Hammerheads have a second, shorter dorsal fin. Despite being shorter, this fin can still be as long as five percent of the shark’s total body length.

The "hammer" of these sharks is clearly their distinguishing feature. The head is often slightly indented in the center of the rectangular hammer, and the head can make up to a quarter of the shark’s total length. This large head can be moved up and down as well as side to side due to specially developed muscles in the head and neck. Besides expanding the shark’s visual range, the hammer-shaped head may be an important part of the shark’s electroreceptive system.

Electroreception is the ability of some sharks and a small number of other aquatic animals to detect electrical signals as they travel through the water. Any muscle contraction by any animal creates an electrical signal (including the contractions of a beating heart), and water conducts electricity extremely well. Sharks use small organs called "ampullae of Lorenzini" to detect these electric fields. An ampulla is a pore with a jelly-filled pit below it. Hairless sensory cells in these pits are stimulated by electrical signals and send information about them to the shark’s brain to be processed, along with auditory, visual, and olfactory inputs. There are several uses for this sense. A shark that cannot see or smell can still find a flatfish buried in the mud using this sense. And since this sense is over one hundred times more sensitive than is needed to detect a resting fish, it may also be used for navigation, since the Earth has a magnetic field. Since corroding metal produces weak voltages, sharks sometimes attack metal objects like boats.

When not attacking submarines, the great hammerhead shark prefers foods such as sardines, herring, tarpon, jacks, grouper, sea cats, flatfish, and croaker. These large fish will also eat stingrays, skates, and even other sharks. In order to consume a ray, the great hammerhead uses its head to pin the hapless ray down, and then bites off the wings before consuming its prey. Some hammerhead sharks eat so many stingrays they develop immunity to the poison of these creatures, despite having their mouths and jaws continuously stuck with stingers.

Hammerhead sharks prefer tropical waters and the warmer of the world’s temperate waters. Many migrate to cooler waters in the summer, returning to the tropics for the winter. The sharks are found in depths up to two hundred and sixty feet, and when far from shore, are often sighted in large schools.

Like many sharks, baby hammerheads are born alive. They are viviparous, meaning that the eggs hatch within the mother and the young mature in the uterus before being born. Unlike many other sharks, female hammerheads have both a placenta and an umbilical cord and can thus nourish their young, helping to prevent the rampant cannibalism that occurs in many other shark species.

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