Dasyatidae Jordan & Gilbert 1879

Angulo, Arturo, Betts, Joel T., González-Alemán, Néstor J., Castañeda, Edgar, Berghe, Eric Van Den, Elías, Diego J., Mcmahan, Caleb D. & Matamoros, Wilfredo A., 2023, Continental fishes of Nicaragua: diversity, distribution and conservation status; with an annotated and illustrated checklist of species and an identification guide to families, Zootaxa 5376 (1), pp. 1-89 : 11

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5376.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9ECCB3F7-5481-47C2-8A5A-E9A3F38C31BA

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10249341

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038C8788-E849-FFBE-FF79-2B65FC4635F5

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dasyatidae Jordan & Gilbert 1879
status

 

Family Dasyatidae Jordan & Gilbert 1879 View in CoL View at ENA ( Fig. 2C View FIGURE 2 ). Whiptail Stingrays; Rayas Batonas, Chupares, Rayas de Espina, Rayas Látigo

Description: Body strongly depressed; anterior edge of the greatly enlarged pectoral fins attached to the sides of the head via the antorbital cartilage; up to 200 cm in length; disc not more than 1.3 times as broad as long; eyes and spiracles on dorsal surface; gill openings ventral; pelvic fins modified as copulatory organs in males; anal fin absent; tail long (distance from cloaca to tip much longer than disc width), very slender to whip-like, without dorsal fin but with one or more long, poisonous spines; caudal fin absent ( Robertson & Allen 2015, Nelson et al. 2016). Distribution: Marine (continental and insular shelves and uppermost slopes, few species oceanic), brackish and freshwater; tropical to warm temperate, Atlantic (including the Mediterranean Sea), Indian and Pacific oceans ( Nelson et al. 2016). One genus and one species in Nicaraguan freshwaters.

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