A new research led by marine scientists at the Michigan State University has confirmed the shark specimen caught in the Gulf of Mexico in 2011 was a bull shark (Carcharhinus leucas) with two heads, rather than conjoined twins.

Two-headed bull shark (Patrick Rice, Shark Defense/Florida Keys Community College)
“There have been other species of sharks, such as blue sharks and tope sharks, born with two heads. This is the first record of dicephalia in a bull shark,” said Prof Michael Wagner of the Michigan State University, who co-authored the study published in the Journal of Fish Biology.
“This is certainly one of those interesting and rarely detected phenomena,” Prof Wagner said. “It’s good that we have this documented as part of the world’s natural history, but we’d certainly have to find many more before we could draw any conclusions about what caused this.”
“The difficulty of finding such oddities is due, in part, to creatures with abnormalities dying shortly after birth. In this instance, a fisherman found the two-headed shark when he opened the uterus of an adult shark. The two-headed shark died shortly thereafter and had little, if any, chance to survive in the wild,” Prof Wagner added.
“You’ll see many more cases of two-headed lizards and snakes,” he said. “That’s because those organisms are often bred in captivity, and the breeders are more likely to observe the anomalies.”
The shark was brought to the marine science department at Florida Keys Community College. From there, it was transported to the Michigan State University for further examination.

A radiograph of the two-headed shark (Michael Wagner)
The scientists were able to detail the discovery with magnetic resonance imaging. Without damaging the unique specimen, the MRIs revealed two distinct heads, hearts and stomachs with the remainder of the body joining together in back half of the animal to form a single tail.
Prof Wagner noted that some may want to attribute the deformed shark to exposure to pollutants.
“Given the timing of the shark’s discovery with the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, I could see how some people may want to jump to conclusions,” he said. “Making that leap is unwarranted. We simply have no evidence to support that cause or any other.”
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Bibliographic information: Wagner C. M. et al. First record of dicephalia in a bull shark Carcharhinus leucas (Chondrichthyes: Carcharhinidae) foetus from the Gulf of Mexico, U.S.A. Journal of Fish Biology, article first published online: March 25, 2013; doi: 10.1111/jfb.12064