The average mature size of this species is and . The largest Pacific sleeper shark verified in size measured long and weighed , although it could possibly reach or more; an enormous Pacific sleeper shark was attracted to a bait in deep water outside
Tokyo Bay,
Japan, and filmed in 1989. The shark was estimated by
Eugenie Clark to be about long. A single unconfirmed account exists of an enormous Pacific sleeper shark that potentially measured more than long. If true, this would make the species the largest extant macro-
predatory shark, and the third largest shark overall after the
whale shark and the
basking shark. Similar to the
Greenland shark, the parasitic
copepod Ommatokoita elongata can often be observed consuming the shark's
corneal tissue, which degrades their
eyesight.
Adaptations Due to living in frigid depths, the sleeper shark's
liver oil does not contain
squalene, which would solidify into a dense, nonbuoyant mass. Instead, the low-density compounds in the sharks' liver are diacylglyceryl ethers and
triacylglycerol, which maintain their fluidity even at the lowest temperatures. They also store very little
urea in their skin (like many deep sea sharks), but like other
elasmobranchs, have high concentrations of urea and
trimethylamine oxide (nitrogenous waste products) within their tissues as
osmoprotectants and to increase their
buoyancy. Trimethylamine oxide also serves to counteract the
protein-
destabilizing tendencies of
urea and pressure. Its presence in the tissues of both elasmobranch and
teleost fish has been found to increase with depth. Because food is relatively scarce on the deep sea floor, the sleeper shark is able to store food in its capacious
stomach. The sleeper shark's jaws are able to produce a powerful bite due to their short and transverse shape. The upper jaw teeth of the sleeper shark are spike-like, while the lower jaw teeth consist of oblique
cusps and overlapping bases. This arrangement allows grasping and sawing of food too large to swallow. Pacific sleeper sharks have a short
caudal fin, which allows them to store energy for fast and violent bursts of energy to catch prey. ==Distribution==