19
Family Urolophidae tingrays and Stingare

Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Family UrolophidaeStingrays and Stingarees

Page 2: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

TaxonomyOrder Myliobatiformes

Family Urolophidae

Genus Urobatis Urolophus

Urotrygon Trygonoptera

25-41 species in 2, 3, or 4 genera

Page 3: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Morphologyround disc, rostrum, and pectoral fins

Page 4: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Morphologyshort tail with rounded caudal fin, no dorsal finsvenomous spine ½ way down tail

Page 5: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Morphology25cm DL (Urotrygon microphthalmum)

66m DL (Urobatis jamaicensis)

Page 6: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Morphologycoloration varies, even within a species

Page 7: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Morphologycoloration varies, even within a species

Page 8: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Morphologymouth with papillae on floordentition unlike other rays

Page 9: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Habitat and Distributioncoastal subtropical and tropical waterE. Indian, E. and W. Pacific, W. Atlantic

U. halleri U. jamaicensis

Page 10: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Habitat and Distributionbenthic- bury in sandusually less than 15-20m deepmay segregate by sex

Page 11: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Reproductioncase study: Urobatis jamaicensis

~7 pups/litter

litter size increases with maternal size only during spring/summer cycle

Page 12: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Reproductionmature at ~15-16cm

aplacental viviparous with histotroph nutirition

gestation 5-6 monthsfemales pregnant throughout the year

bi-annual reproducers parturition in June-September and November-January

Page 13: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Prey/Feeding Habitsfeed on benthic invertebrates

some species use pectoral fins to get inverts out of substrate

Page 14: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Human Importancemay sting the feet of beachgoers

Urolophus halleri in Seal Beach, CA“stingray shuffle”

economic importance- aquariums little importance to fisheries

Page 15: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Conservation Statusmost species -data deficient or least concern on Redlist

3 species vulnerable

Urolophus orarius- endangered (Australia) Urolophus javanicus- critically endangered (Java)

Page 16: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Researchreproductive biology- may sort out taxonomy

U. halleri in Seal Beach (Chris Lowe at CSULB) spine regeneration, abundance, distribution,

and thermal preferences

Page 17: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

ResearchU. jamaicensis sensory biology comparative studies

FAU sharklabprey-related olfactory sensitivityvisual fields/binocular vision, color vision

Page 18: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

ResearchU. jamaicensis locomotion (“punting”) in FAU sharklab

Page 19: Family Urolophidae Stingrays and Stingarees. Taxonomy Order Myliobatiformes Family Urolophidae Genus Urobatis Urolophus Urotrygon Trygonoptera 25-41 species

Literature CitedBester, C. 2006. Round Stingray. Florida Museum Natural History, Icthyology Department.

University of Florida. < http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/>. Downloaded on 22 November 2007.

Fahy, D.P. and R.E. Spieler. 2007. Preliminary observations on the reproductive cycle and uterine fecundity of the yellow stingray, Urobatis jamaicensis (Elasmobranchii: Myliobatiformes: Urolophidae) in southeast Florida, U.S.A. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology Suppl 14: 131-139.

Hoisington IV, G. and C.G. Lowe. 2005. Abundance and distribution of the round stingray, Urobatis halleri, near a heated effluent outfall. Marine Environmental Research 60: 437-453.

IUCN 2007. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 22 November 2007.

Piercy, A. 2006. Yellow Stingray. Florida Museum Natural History, Icthyology Department. University of Florida. < http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/>. Downloaded on 22 November 2007.