“…Tumours involved the nervous, digestive, integumentary, excretory, hematopoietic, reproductive, skeletal and endocrine systems of animals from inshore and offshore locations, as well as public aquaria. Since then, additional reports of neoplastic and proliferative lesions in elasmobranchs have included gingival mucoepidermoid papilloma in a captive sandtiger shark, Carcharias taurus (Rafinesque) and epulis in a wild‐caught blue shark, Prionace glauca (L.) (Borucinska, Harshbarger, Reimschuessel, & Bogicevic, ), melanoma in a wild‐caught nurse shark, Ginglymostoma cirratum (Bonnaterre), (Waldoch, Burke, Ramer, & Garner, ), cutaneous lymphosarcoma in a captive bonnethead shark, Sphyrna tiburo (L.) (Manire, Clarke, Wert, & Landolfi, ), presumptive dysgerminoma in an orange‐spot freshwater stingray, Potamotrygon motoro (Müller and Henle) (Jafarey, Berlinski, Hanley, Garner, & Kiupel, ), and a gingival fibrohistiocytoma in a great white shark, Carcharodon carcharias (L.) (Huveneers et al., ; ). Dermal and renal fibromas, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, melanoma, pituitary adenoma and adenoma of the corpuscle of Stannius were also observed in at least five shark or ray species by Garner ().…”