Hemigaleidae
The weasel sharks are a family, the Hemigaleidae, of ground sharks found from the eastern Atlantic Ocean to the continental Indo-Pacific. They are found in shallow coastal waters to a depth of.
Most species are small, reaching no more than long, though the snaggletooth shark may reach. They have horizontally oval eyes, small spiracles, and precaudal pits. Two dorsal fins occur with the base of the first placed well forward of the pelvic fins. The caudal fin has a strong ventral lobe and undulations on the dorsal lobe margin. They feed on a variety of small bony fishes and invertebrates; at least two species specialize on cephalopods. They are not known to have attacked people.
Genera and species
The eight known species in this family are placed in four genera. Hemipristis is placed in the subfamily Hemipristinae, while Chaenogaleus, Hemigaleus, and Paragaleus are placed in the subfamily Hemigaleinae.''Chaenogaleus''
This genus consists of a single species, the hooktooth shark, characterized by long, hooked teeth in the lower jaw and no toothless spaces at the midlines of the jaws. The gill slits are very long, the snout is wedge-shaped, and the fins are not falcate. Known fossil species include C. affinis.- Chaenogaleus macrostoma
''Hemigaleus''
- Hemigaleus australiensis W. T. White, Last & Compagno, 2005
- Hemigaleus microstoma Bleeker, 1852
''Hemipristis''
- Hemipristis elongata
''Paragaleus''
- Paragaleus leucolomatus Compagno & Smale, 1985
- Paragaleus pectoralis
- Paragaleus randalli Compagno, Krupp & K. E. Carpenter, 1996
- Paragaleus tengi