Large Hammerhead Sharks in Captivity

SharkFinatic

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5+ year member
Is it just me, or do large hammerheads (specifically scalloped and great hammerheads) seem to be relatively rare in captivity compared to certain other sharks like, say, sand tigers or blacktips? I can’t imagine it being a welfare issue, because the aquariums that do keep them seem to maintain them just fine. And it certainly can’t be a demand issue, since hammerheads are some of the most famous sharks of all. Anyone have any theories why?
 
In the past they tended to suddenly die, and you have to design very large tanks with no corners for them. They are definitely harder to keep than sand tigers and blacktip reef sharks. That said, I have seen both scalloped and great hammerheads at aquariums. The former is somewhat common in Asia, and I recommend Sentosa SEA Aquarium for seeing them (there are 2 enormous tanks with scalloped hammerheads). Osaka Kaiyukan is also a great place to see scalloped hammerheads from multiple angles. As for great hammerheads, I know Adventure Aquarium in New Jersey has one, and I saw a pair in an outdoor lagoon at Atlantis Paradise Island, Bahamas.
 
As RatioTile said its a space issue as Hammerheads typically are migratory meaning they need very large tanks. This is also part of the reason why Leatherback Sea Turtles and Great Whites can't be kept in an aquarium. Luckily Scalloped and Great Hammers don't travel great lengths every day and can find peace in staying in one area.
 
That said mortality rates with Scalloped Hammerheads are still high in many aquariums, together with them being listed as endangered on the IUCN red list, will make enough zoos less keen to go for them...
 
Nausicaa in Boulogne sur Mer imported 30+ young scalloped hamerheads. They all died.

Burgers Zoo imported 1.2 scalloped hamerheads, 2 died almost as soon as they arrived. The last one died after 10 years.

Den Blå planet has imported 10 scalloped hamerheads. Don't know the current status.

The aquarium in Paris has or had 3 scalloped hamerheads
 
The Osaka Aquarium has large Hammerheads, so does the Tokyo Sea Life Park, but theirs are much smaller, maybe 70ish cm tops. They seem to have enough room currently, but their tank is far too small for an adult, and contains species that could be potential prey for an adult (Cownose Rays and Indian Mackerel(?)), so they will likely be moved to a larger tank or released once they grow too large.
 

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I don't really have any theories beyond what's already been stated, but I do know Georgia Aquarium used to have great hammerheads in the Ocean Voyager exhibit, and I'm pretty sure, although not 100 percent, that they're getting them back for the new shark gallery said to open in the fall.
 
Point Defiance has scalloped hammerheads in their Baja Bay tank. It’s a pretty large tank with no sharp corners and the sharks seem to be doing great. It does mean that a lot of fish tend to stay near the bottom though instead of straying up to where the sharks are. They’re very popular with visitors because it’s the only place in this area that displays them.
 
In the past they tended to suddenly die, and you have to design very large tanks with no corners for them. They are definitely harder to keep than sand tigers and blacktip reef sharks. That said, I have seen both scalloped and great hammerheads at aquariums. The former is somewhat common in Asia, and I recommend Sentosa SEA Aquarium for seeing them (there are 2 enormous tanks with scalloped hammerheads). Osaka Kaiyukan is also a great place to see scalloped hammerheads from multiple angles. As for great hammerheads, I know Adventure Aquarium in New Jersey has one, and I saw a pair in an outdoor lagoon at Atlantis Paradise Island, Bahamas.
What husbandry and housing criteria are critical for hammerheads to do well in a larger aquarium tank? What makes them so sensitive to some captivity exhibitory?
 
I don't really have any theories beyond what's already been stated, but I do know Georgia Aquarium used to have great hammerheads in the Ocean Voyager exhibit, and I'm pretty sure, although not 100 percent, that they're getting them back for the new shark gallery said to open in the fall.
Hammerheads are mentionned on the website for the new shark tank : Expansion 2020 - Georgia Aquarium

I visited Biarritz Aquarium (Musée de la Mer- France) last week and saw there was a scalloped hammerhead shark remaining (on the two presented at the opening of the 2011 expansion).

I don't know the situation in Paris Aquarium. The scalloped hammerhead sharks are still mentionned on the website but I couldn't find a recent picture of them (on the web, Faceboook...).
 
Sorry to revive a dead thread haha, but I was poking around the web looking for info on smooth hammerhead captivity and found this. Figured I could lend a bit of insight from the shark scientist and aquarist realms…

Hammerhead sharks are, according to basically every aquarist I’ve talked to, incredibly finicky. They’re very easy to stress out because they’re highly sensitive animals. That massive cephalofoil houses all of their electrosensory organs, and they have a wider spread of those given that shape, which means they experience a vast amount of sensory triggers constantly. This is not exactly conducive to aquarium life - life support systems generate electrical signals, as do the lighting, the various pieces of technology around the exhibit, and even peoples’ smartphones. Additionally, they’ve been known to be prone to illness, which could very well be due to the fact that they stress so easily and their immune systems thus are correspondingly weakened. A friend of mine did her master’s thesis on elasmobranch captive stress, and I recall she said that in her experience they’re some of the most easily harmed species in that regard. My experience with studying the aquariums that hold or have held them has been similar; basically every facility I’ve been to that’s among that number has some form of, for lack of a better word, horror story regarding how they’ve been doing well one day and then passed away the next. Just looking at this very thread, Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium has now lost all their scalloped hammerheads, seemingly very suddenly over a short period in the last two years or so. Even Georgia Aquarium, one of the most successful facilities in the world at exhibiting great hammerheads, actually lost the species for around a half decade prior to the opening of Sharks: Predators of the Deep from what I gather (all of the original hammerheads in Ocean Voyager passed away). From what I can tell in America, only Monterey Bay Aquarium has had essentially no difficulty in managing scalloped hammerheads, as they’ve apparently had many of the same individuals for quite some time at least since the remodel of the Open Sea. They of course have an enormous and specialized pelagic tank, which may have relatively limited electrosensory interference given the sheer volume. Disney’s “The Seas with Nemo and Friends” at Epcot also has a scalloped hammerhead that’s been on exhibit for, it seems, over a decade, but that’s another truly massive tank that also seems to be very well maintained and monitored, and it is just a single shark so perhaps that individual is uniquely healthy and stress free.

What I can say for certain is that many aquarists I’ve spoken to really would prefer to avoid the species. They obviously really care about the animals they are stewarding, at least generally, and it’s of course brutal to lose one. Most I’ve spoken with simply do not want to take the chance of doing harm to such rare and beautiful animals any longer, unless they’re certain they can provide them the best possible home and care.
 
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What about bonnethead sharks? It looks like they've had a track record of captive breeding successes, and many I've seen are not in particularly spacious or specialized tanks.
 
What about bonnethead sharks? It looks like they've had a track record of captive breeding successes, and many I've seen are not in particularly spacious or specialized tanks.
Bonnetheads are pretty unusual hammerheads by comparison, yeah. They do indeed rarely have major issues in captivity, which could be because they’re slightly less hypersensitive on the whole and live in nearshore environments, thus are more used to smaller environments with less space. However I can say that certain aquaria (I don’t want to name names to avoid outing my sources) have had issues where whole groups of bonnetheads have suddenly died due to illness. One such incident at a relatively new aquarium also killed off all of their scalloped hammerheads but no other sharks in the tank. So my guess is they are still fairly sensitive and easy to lose if conditions are wrong or if a parasite outbreak, even one that might be more minor to other sharks, occurs.
 
so they will likely be moved to a larger tank or released once they grow too large.
This prediction turned out to be correct - the hammerheads (as well as everything else previously in this tank) have been moved into the large donut tank. Still seems small for adult hammerheads, but they're still smallish so should be sufficient for a while.
 
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