Scientists have confirmed the discovery of the first ever case of a two-headed bull shark foetus.
A fisherman found the 20cm-long foetus in a bull shark caught near Florida in April 2011, and passed it on to the marine science department at Florida Keys Community College.
The finding has been described in a study led by Michigan State University and published in Journal of Fish Biology today.
There have only been about six published reports of two-headed sharks ever recorded, however this is the first example of a two-headed bull shark, Michael Wagner, MSU assistant professor of fisheries and wildlife said.
The shark has what is called "dicephalia" and is not a case of conjoined twin sharks, rather it is a shark with two developed heads.