Protea Banks Shark Identification Tool
Use this Protea Banks Shark Identification Tool to compare the main shark species associated with Protea Banks and the KwaZulu-Natal coast. Choose the body shape, head shape, movement style and sighting clues that best match what you saw, then explore a matching animated 3D shark model.
Shark identification underwater can be difficult because visibility, distance, current, angle and excitement all affect what a diver remembers. This tool helps you start with the most reliable clues: body shape, head profile, fin shape, swimming style and whether the shark was seen alone, in a group, on the reef or in open water.
The tool includes tiger shark, bull shark, hammerhead shark, blacktip shark, ragged-tooth shark and guitar shark models. It is designed for education, dive preparation and post-dive marine-life identification, not as a guarantee of what will be seen on any specific Protea Banks dive.
Find the Shark You Saw
Answer a few simple sighting questions, then compare the suggested shark in 3D. You can also choose any shark manually using the selector below the viewer.
Shark Identification Questions
Hammerheads are the best match when the shark has a wide hammer-shaped head or appears in schooling seasonal movement.
Hammerhead Shark
Loading the first shark. You can also choose any shark below.
Hammerheads are instantly recognisable by their wide head shape. They are one of the classic seasonal shark encounters associated with Protea Banks.
How the Shark Identification Tool Works
The Protea Banks Shark Identification Tool is built around the visual clues divers are most likely to remember after a dive. Instead of asking for a scientific name, it starts with body shape, head shape, movement and the type of sighting.
This is useful because shark encounters can be quick, exciting and affected by visibility, current and distance. A diver may not remember every detail, but they often remember whether the shark was heavy-bodied, hammer-shaped, slim and fast, toothy, or unusually flattened like a guitar shark.
1. Body Shape
Was the shark heavy and powerful, stocky, slim and fast, calm-looking, or unusually flat at the front?
2. Head Shape
A hammer-shaped head, broad blunt head, visible teeth or flattened front body can quickly narrow the result.
3. Movement
Fast active movement, steady power, calm reef movement or schooling behaviour all help separate species.
4. Sighting Context
Baited dive, reef feature, summer season, winter season or unusual body shape can all change the likely match.
Why 3D Helps Shark Identification
A single photograph can make sharks look more similar than they really are. The 3D viewer lets divers rotate each model and compare full body outline, head shape, tail position, fin profile and relative size.
This makes it easier to compare tiger sharks, bull sharks, hammerheads, blacktips, ragged-tooth sharks and guitar sharks before or after a dive. The tool is not a scientific guarantee, but it is a practical learning aid for divers.
What Each Shark Identification Result Means
The tool gives a suggested shark match based on the visual clues you select. Use the result as a starting point, then compare the 3D model with your own memory, dive footage or photographs.
Hammerhead Shark
Sphyrna spp.
The easiest shark to separate by head shape. If the shark had a wide hammer-shaped head or appeared as part of seasonal schooling activity, hammerhead is the strongest match.
Tiger Shark
Galeocerdo cuvier
A large, heavy-bodied shark with a powerful presence. Tiger shark is the likely match when the shark looked big, deep-bodied and dominant in open water.
Bull Shark
Carcharhinus leucas
A stocky shark with a broad blunt head and powerful body. Locally known as the Zambezi shark, this is a key Protea Banks shark to recognise.
Blacktip Shark
Carcharhinus limbatus
Slimmer, faster and more active than the larger heavy-bodied sharks. Blacktip is a good match when the shark looked agile, streamlined and quick-moving.
Ragged-Tooth Shark
Carcharias taurus
Often recognised by its visible teeth, heavy body and calm reef presence. A winter reef sighting with a toothy appearance points strongly toward ragged-tooth shark.
Guitar Shark
Rhina ancylostoma
The most unusual shape in the tool. If the animal had a flattened ray-like front body but a shark-like tail, guitar shark is the clearest match.
Identification Tip for Divers
Try not to rely on colour alone. Underwater colour changes with depth, light and visibility. Body shape, head profile, fin position and movement are usually more reliable clues when identifying sharks after a Protea Banks dive.
Use This Shark Tool With the Protea Banks Marine Life Guides
The shark identification tool works best when used alongside the wider Protea Banks marine-life pages. Use the tool to narrow down a possible shark match, then compare that result with the shark species guide, the sharks and rays page, and the wider marine-life finder.
Sharks and Rays of Protea Banks
Explore the combined 3D shark and ray guide with tiger sharks, bull sharks, hammerheads, eagle rays, guitar sharks and manta rays.
Shark GuideShark Species of Protea Banks
Read the complete diver-focused shark species guide covering the main sharks associated with Protea Banks and KwaZulu-Natal.
Marine Life ToolProtea Banks Marine Life Finder
Compare sharks, rays, turtles, dolphins and whales using the wider Protea Banks marine-life finder.
Ray GuideRays of Protea Banks
Continue from shark identification into eagle rays, guitar sharks, honeycomb rays, electric rays and other ray-shaped marine life.
Ray ToolRay Identification Tool
Use the companion ray tool to compare body shape, wing shape, tail shape and bottom-associated ray features.
Plan a DivePlan Your Protea Banks Dive
See Protea Banks dive planning information, seasons, packages and booking guidance for divers visiting the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast.
Important Note About Shark Identification
This tool is a practical diver education aid. It helps you compare likely shark matches from visual clues, but it should not be treated as a scientific confirmation from a brief underwater sighting.
For the best result, compare the 3D model with your own photos, video footage, dive guide comments and the full Protea Banks shark species guide.