Sharks are not mammals.
Sharks belong to the vertebrate group known as Fish. Specifically, they belong to the vertebrate group known as Chondrichthyes - all sharks and rays - which have skeletons of cartilage rather than bone.
Sharks belong in the fish family and resultingly the largest fish in the world is the basking shark. (A+ free swimmers)
No, sharks and whales belong to different groups. Sharks are fish and belong to the group Chondrichthyes, while whales are mammals and belong to the group Cetacea. They are both classified under the superclass Osteichthyes, which includes all bony fish, but they diverged into separate evolutionary paths long ago.
The only fish that do belong to the group are sharks, rays and chimaeras. All others do not.
Chondrichthyes
Sharks belong to the vertebrate group known as Chondrichthyes, which includes animals with skeletons made of cartilage rather than bone.
The only fish that do belong to the group are sharks, rays and chimaeras. All others do not.
Sharks have induvidual names like The hammer head or the great white shark
No because sharks belong to the mammal family
because it is a fish that swims under water and they are called fish!
Sharks are a type of cartilaginous fish, that is their skeleton is made of cartilage rather than bone. They belong to the vertebrate subphylum of chondrichthyes.