Large-spotted catshark

Nursehound

Scyliorhinus stellaris

  • Where it lives:

  • Native species
Statistics 
Length:Up to 160cm

The nursehound is a nocturnal predator, hunting smaller fish close to the seafloor.

About

Nursehounds like to stay close to the sea floor, living in rocky areas with lots of algae. They hunt at night, feeding on cephalopods (like squid and octopus), crustaceans (like crabs and large shrimp), smaller fish and even other sharks.

During the day they hide in holes and crevices in the rock, with several sharks sometimes resting in the same crevice. 

The nursehound is also known as the greater-spotted catshark, bull huss, greater-spotted dogfish, and rough hound shark – that’s a lot of names for one species!

How to identify

The nurseshound is a large catshark, long and slender but quite stocky towards the front. It has large spots all over its body, and nasal flaps that fall just short of the mouth.

Did you know?

Nursehounds lay their eggs amongst seaweed. The egg cases have curly tendrils that wrap around the seaweed to prevent the egg case from floating away.