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Longnose stingray

The longnose stingray (Hypanus guttatus) is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae, native to the western Atlantic Ocean from the southern Gulf of Mexico to Brazil. Found in coastal waters no deeper than 36 m (118 ft), this demersal species favors muddy or sandy habitats. The longnose stingray is characterized by its angular, rhomboid pectoral fin disc, moderately projecting snout, and whip-like tail with a dorsal keel and ventral fin fold. It typically grows to 1.25 m (4.1 ft) across and is brownish above and light-colored below.

Longnose stingray
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Superorder: Batoidea
Order: Myliobatiformes
Family: Dasyatidae
Genus: Hypanus
Species:
H. guttatus
Binomial name
Hypanus guttatus
Range of the longnose stingray
Synonyms[2]
  • Dasyatis guttata (Bloch & Schneider, 1801)
  • Raja guttata Bloch & Schneider, 1801
  • Raja tuberculata Lacepède, 1800
  • Trygon jabebara Müller & Henle, 1841
  • Trygon osteosticta Müller, 1835

Longnose stingrays feed mainly on bottom-dwelling invertebrates and small bony fishes. Reproduction is aplacental viviparous, with females bearing two litters of 1–2 pups per year. The young are born in relatively fresh water, move into saltier water as juveniles, and then back into fresher water as adults. This species is valued by commercial and recreational fishers in many parts of its range, and utilized for meat, gelatin, oil, and even the aquarium trade.

Taxonomy and phylogeny edit

The first known reference to the longnose stingray was by German naturalist Georg Marcgrave in his 1648 Historia Rerum Naturalis Brasiliae, under the name "iabebirete". Marcgrave's account formed the basis for this species' formal scientific description as Raja guttata, by later German naturalists Marcus Elieser Bloch and Johann Gottlob Schneider in their 1801 Systema Ichthyologiae. Subsequent authors moved this species to the genus Dasyatis. No type specimen has been designated.[3]

Lisa Rosenberger's 2001 phylogenetic analysis, based on morphology, found that the sister species of the longnose stingray is the sharpsnout stingray (Fontitrygon geijskesi), and that two form a clade with the pale-edged stingray (Telatrygon zugei), the pearl stingray (F. margaritella), the sharpnose stingray (Maculabatis gerrardi), and the smooth butterfly ray (Gymnura micrura), included in the study as an outgroup). These results support the growing consensus that neither Dasyatis nor Himantura are monophyletic.[4]

Distribution and habitat edit

The longnose stingray can be found in regions ranging from the southern Gulf of Mexico southward to the Brazilian state of Paraná, including the Greater and Lesser Antilles. This bottom-dwelling species inhabits inshore marine and brackish waters from the intertidal zone to a depth of 36 m (118 ft).[1][5] It favors muddy or sandy substrates, and is tolerant of wide variations in salinity.[6]

Description edit

The longnose stingray has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc slightly wider than long, with outer corners forming approximately right angles and gently concave anterior margins converging to an obtuse, moderately projecting snout. The mouth is curved with a median projection in the upper jaw that fits into an indentation in the lower jaw. A row of three papillae are found across the floor of the mouth. There are 34–46 tooth rows in the upper jaw; the teeth have tetragonal bases and blunt crowns in females and juveniles and sharp, pointed cusps in mature males. The pelvic fins are rounded.[5][7]

The slender, whip-like tail is much longer than the disc and usually bears a single serrated stinging spine near the base (some individuals have no spine or more than one). Behind the spine, there is a long, fleshy dorsal keel and a ventral fin fold two-thirds to four-fifths as high as the tail. A row of small, blunt thorns or tubercles is present along the midline of the back, from between the eyes to the base of the tail spine. Larger rays also gain a mid-dorsal band of heart-shaped, flattened denticles. The coloration is olive, brown, or gray above, sometimes with darker spots, and yellowish to white below; the keel and fin fold on the tail are black.[5][7] This species reaches a maximum known disc width of 2 m (6.6 ft), though 1.25 m (4.1 ft) is more typical.[8] Females grow larger than males.[9]

Biology and ecology edit

Longnose stingrays seem to occupy basically the same ecological niche as the more northerly Atlantic stingray (D. sabina). Where the ranges of the two species overlap, there is spatial segregation with longnose stingrays being found at depths of 1–15 m (3.3–49.2 ft) and Atlantic stingrays being found at depths of up to 50–60 m (160–200 ft).[10] This species feeds mainly on benthic invertebrates and small bony fishes, often using its pectoral fins to uncover burrowing prey. Its pavement-like teeth enables it to grind up hard-shelled organisms.[6] One study off the Brazilian state of Ceará found that the most common prey taken were holothuriid sea cucumbers, peanut worms, eunicid polychaete worms, bivalves and gastropods, the crustaceans Penaeus and Callinectes, and the grunt Pomadasys corvinaeformis.[1] Known parasites of the longnose stingray include the tapeworms Rhinebothrium margaritense and Rhodobothrium pulvinatum,[11] the isopods Excorallana tricornis and Rocinela signata,[12] and the monogenean Monocotyle guttatae.[13]

In common with other stingrays, the longnose stingray is aplacental viviparous, in which the developing embryos are sustained by yolk and later histotroph ("uterine milk") produced by the mother. Females have a single functional uterus, on the left, and bear two litters of 1–2 pups per year, one around March and the other around November. The gestation period is 5–6 months long with vitellogenesis (yolk formation) occurring at the same time, such as that females can ovulate a new batch of ova and mate again immediately after giving birth.[9][14] Longnose stingrays measure 12.3–15.3 cm (4.8–6.0 in) across at birth.[14] Parturition occurs in water with relatively low salinity, but the young soon move into saltier water (half to full-strength seawater).[15] A known nursery area for this species occurs off the beaches of Caiçara do Norte in northeastern Brazil, where newborns and small juveniles have been reported from water no more than 3 m (9.8 ft) deep from February to October.[14] Very small juveniles have also been observed in tidal pools in Ceará.[1] Males mature at 50–60 cm (20–24 in) across and females at 60–70 cm (24–28 in) across.[16] At the onset of sexual maturation, longnose stingrays move back into water with lower salinities of 20 ppt or less; females over 75 cm (30 in) across are found only in salinities of under 5 ppt.[15]

Human interactions edit

The venomous tail spine of the longnose stingray is potentially dangerous to beachgoers and fishery workers.[5] Throughout its range, this species is taken intentionally and otherwise by commercial fisheries, using gillnets, trawls, and longlines. It is the most commonly caught stingray off the Guyanas and the Brazilian states of Maranhão and Paraíba, and is becoming increasingly important elsewhere.[1][6][16] The longnose stingray is also targeted by recreational surf anglers in Ceará.[1] The meat of its "wings" is highly esteemed and sold fresh, frozen, or salted; this ray is also utilized in the production of gelatin and high-quality oil, and at least five individuals were found in the Ceará aquarium trade from 1995 to 2000.[6][8] The impact of fishing on the longnose stingray population has been little-investigated outside Brazil. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed its conservation status as near threatened.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Carlson, J., Charvet, P., Blanco-Parra, MP, Briones Bell-lloch, A., Cardenosa, D., Derrick, D., Espinoza, E., Marcante, F., Morales-Saldaña, J.M., Naranjo-Elizondo, B., Schneider, E.V.C. & Simpson, N.J. (2020). "Hypanus guttatus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T44592A104125629. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T44592A104125629.en. Retrieved 26 May 2023.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Bailly, Nicolas (2017). "Hypanus guttatus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801)". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  3. ^ Catalog of Fishes (Online Version) 2015-05-03 at the Wayback Machine. California Academy of Sciences. Retrieved on January 15, 2010.
  4. ^ Rosenberger, L.J.; Schaefer, S. A. (August 6, 2001). Schaefer, S. A. (ed.). "Phylogenetic Relationships within the Stingray Genus Dasyatis (Chondrichthyes: Dasyatidae)". Copeia. 2001 (3): 615–627. doi:10.1643/0045-8511(2001)001[0615:PRWTSG]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 85657403.
  5. ^ a b c d McEachran, J.D. & M.R. de Carvalho (2002). "Dasyatidae". In Carpenter, K.E. (ed.). The Living Marine Resources of the Western Central Atlantic (Volume 1). Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations. pp. 562–571. ISBN 92-5-104825-8.
  6. ^ a b c d Léopold, M. (2004). Poissons de mer de Guyane. Editions Quae. pp. 38–39. ISBN 2-84433-135-1.
  7. ^ a b McEachran, J.D. & J.D. Fechhelm (1998). Fishes of the Gulf of Mexico: Myxiniformes to Gasterosteiformes. University of Texas Press. p. 176. ISBN 0-292-75206-7.
  8. ^ a b Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2023). "Hypanus guttatus" in FishBase. July 2023 version.
  9. ^ a b Yokota, L. & R.P. Lessa (2007). "Reproductive biology of three ray species: Gymnura micrura (Bloch & Schneider, 1801), Dasyatis guttata (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) and Dasyatis marianae Gomes, Rosa & Gadig, 2000, caught by artisanal fisheries in Northeastern Brazil". Cahiers de Biologie Marine. 48: 249–257.
  10. ^ Castro-Aguirre, J.L. & H.E. Pérez (1996). Catálogo Sistemático de las Rayas y Especies Afines de México: Chondrichthyes: Elasmobranchii: Rajiformes: Batoideiomorpha. UNAM. p. 44. ISBN 968-36-5623-4.
  11. ^ Mayes, M.A. & D.R. Brooks (1981). "Cestode parasites of some Venezuelan stingrays". Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 93 (4): 1230–1238.
  12. ^ Williams, E.H. (Jr.); L. Bunkley-Williams & C.J. Sanner (1994). "New host and locality records for copepod and isopod parasites of Colombian marine fishes". Journal of Aquatic Animal Health. 6 (4): 362–364. doi:10.1577/1548-8667(1994)006<0362:NHALRF>2.3.CO;2.
  13. ^ Portes Santos, C.; A.L. Santos & D.I. Gibson (February 2006). "A new species of Monocotyle Taschenberg, 1878 (Monogenea: Monocotylidae) from Dasyatis guttata (Dasyatidae)". Journal of Parasitology. 92 (1): 21–24. doi:10.1645/GE-603R.1. PMID 16629309. S2CID 20778168.
  14. ^ a b c Yokota, L. & R.P. Lessa (March 2006). "A nursery area for sharks and rays in northeastern Brazil". Environmental Biology of Fishes. 75 (3): 349–360. doi:10.1007/s10641-006-0038-9. S2CID 6178316.
  15. ^ a b Thorson, T.B. (1983). "Observations on the morphology, ecology and life history of the euryhaline stingray, Dasyatis guttata (Bloch and Schneider) 1801". Acta Biologica Venezuelica. 11 (4): 95–126.
  16. ^ a b Batista da Silva, G.; T. Holando Basilio; F.C. Pereira Nascimento & A.A. Fonteles-Filho (2007). "Size at first sexual maturity of the sting rays Dasyatis guttata and Dasyatis americana, off Ceara State". Arquivos de Ciencias do Mar. 40 (2): 14–18.

longnose, stingray, longnose, stingray, hypanus, guttatus, species, stingray, family, dasyatidae, native, western, atlantic, ocean, from, southern, gulf, mexico, brazil, found, coastal, waters, deeper, than, this, demersal, species, favors, muddy, sandy, habit. The longnose stingray Hypanus guttatus is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae native to the western Atlantic Ocean from the southern Gulf of Mexico to Brazil Found in coastal waters no deeper than 36 m 118 ft this demersal species favors muddy or sandy habitats The longnose stingray is characterized by its angular rhomboid pectoral fin disc moderately projecting snout and whip like tail with a dorsal keel and ventral fin fold It typically grows to 1 25 m 4 1 ft across and is brownish above and light colored below Longnose stingrayConservation statusNear Threatened IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ChondrichthyesSubclass ElasmobranchiiSuperorder BatoideaOrder MyliobatiformesFamily DasyatidaeGenus HypanusSpecies H guttatusBinomial nameHypanus guttatus Bloch amp J G Schneider 1801 Range of the longnose stingraySynonyms 2 Dasyatis guttata Bloch amp Schneider 1801 Raja guttata Bloch amp Schneider 1801Raja tuberculata Lacepede 1800Trygon jabebara Muller amp Henle 1841Trygon osteosticta Muller 1835Longnose stingrays feed mainly on bottom dwelling invertebrates and small bony fishes Reproduction is aplacental viviparous with females bearing two litters of 1 2 pups per year The young are born in relatively fresh water move into saltier water as juveniles and then back into fresher water as adults This species is valued by commercial and recreational fishers in many parts of its range and utilized for meat gelatin oil and even the aquarium trade Contents 1 Taxonomy and phylogeny 2 Distribution and habitat 3 Description 4 Biology and ecology 5 Human interactions 6 ReferencesTaxonomy and phylogeny editThe first known reference to the longnose stingray was by German naturalist Georg Marcgrave in his 1648 Historia Rerum Naturalis Brasiliae under the name iabebirete Marcgrave s account formed the basis for this species formal scientific description as Raja guttata by later German naturalists Marcus Elieser Bloch and Johann Gottlob Schneider in their 1801 Systema Ichthyologiae Subsequent authors moved this species to the genus Dasyatis No type specimen has been designated 3 Lisa Rosenberger s 2001 phylogenetic analysis based on morphology found that the sister species of the longnose stingray is the sharpsnout stingray Fontitrygon geijskesi and that two form a clade with the pale edged stingray Telatrygon zugei the pearl stingray F margaritella the sharpnose stingray Maculabatis gerrardi and the smooth butterfly ray Gymnura micrura included in the study as an outgroup These results support the growing consensus that neither Dasyatis nor Himantura are monophyletic 4 Distribution and habitat editThe longnose stingray can be found in regions ranging from the southern Gulf of Mexico southward to the Brazilian state of Parana including the Greater and Lesser Antilles This bottom dwelling species inhabits inshore marine and brackish waters from the intertidal zone to a depth of 36 m 118 ft 1 5 It favors muddy or sandy substrates and is tolerant of wide variations in salinity 6 Description editThe longnose stingray has a diamond shaped pectoral fin disc slightly wider than long with outer corners forming approximately right angles and gently concave anterior margins converging to an obtuse moderately projecting snout The mouth is curved with a median projection in the upper jaw that fits into an indentation in the lower jaw A row of three papillae are found across the floor of the mouth There are 34 46 tooth rows in the upper jaw the teeth have tetragonal bases and blunt crowns in females and juveniles and sharp pointed cusps in mature males The pelvic fins are rounded 5 7 The slender whip like tail is much longer than the disc and usually bears a single serrated stinging spine near the base some individuals have no spine or more than one Behind the spine there is a long fleshy dorsal keel and a ventral fin fold two thirds to four fifths as high as the tail A row of small blunt thorns or tubercles is present along the midline of the back from between the eyes to the base of the tail spine Larger rays also gain a mid dorsal band of heart shaped flattened denticles The coloration is olive brown or gray above sometimes with darker spots and yellowish to white below the keel and fin fold on the tail are black 5 7 This species reaches a maximum known disc width of 2 m 6 6 ft though 1 25 m 4 1 ft is more typical 8 Females grow larger than males 9 Biology and ecology editLongnose stingrays seem to occupy basically the same ecological niche as the more northerly Atlantic stingray D sabina Where the ranges of the two species overlap there is spatial segregation with longnose stingrays being found at depths of 1 15 m 3 3 49 2 ft and Atlantic stingrays being found at depths of up to 50 60 m 160 200 ft 10 This species feeds mainly on benthic invertebrates and small bony fishes often using its pectoral fins to uncover burrowing prey Its pavement like teeth enables it to grind up hard shelled organisms 6 One study off the Brazilian state of Ceara found that the most common prey taken were holothuriid sea cucumbers peanut worms eunicid polychaete worms bivalves and gastropods the crustaceans Penaeus and Callinectes and the grunt Pomadasys corvinaeformis 1 Known parasites of the longnose stingray include the tapeworms Rhinebothrium margaritense and Rhodobothrium pulvinatum 11 the isopods Excorallana tricornis and Rocinela signata 12 and the monogenean Monocotyle guttatae 13 In common with other stingrays the longnose stingray is aplacental viviparous in which the developing embryos are sustained by yolk and later histotroph uterine milk produced by the mother Females have a single functional uterus on the left and bear two litters of 1 2 pups per year one around March and the other around November The gestation period is 5 6 months long with vitellogenesis yolk formation occurring at the same time such as that females can ovulate a new batch of ova and mate again immediately after giving birth 9 14 Longnose stingrays measure 12 3 15 3 cm 4 8 6 0 in across at birth 14 Parturition occurs in water with relatively low salinity but the young soon move into saltier water half to full strength seawater 15 A known nursery area for this species occurs off the beaches of Caicara do Norte in northeastern Brazil where newborns and small juveniles have been reported from water no more than 3 m 9 8 ft deep from February to October 14 Very small juveniles have also been observed in tidal pools in Ceara 1 Males mature at 50 60 cm 20 24 in across and females at 60 70 cm 24 28 in across 16 At the onset of sexual maturation longnose stingrays move back into water with lower salinities of 20 ppt or less females over 75 cm 30 in across are found only in salinities of under 5 ppt 15 Human interactions editThe venomous tail spine of the longnose stingray is potentially dangerous to beachgoers and fishery workers 5 Throughout its range this species is taken intentionally and otherwise by commercial fisheries using gillnets trawls and longlines It is the most commonly caught stingray off the Guyanas and the Brazilian states of Maranhao and Paraiba and is becoming increasingly important elsewhere 1 6 16 The longnose stingray is also targeted by recreational surf anglers in Ceara 1 The meat of its wings is highly esteemed and sold fresh frozen or salted this ray is also utilized in the production of gelatin and high quality oil and at least five individuals were found in the Ceara aquarium trade from 1995 to 2000 6 8 The impact of fishing on the longnose stingray population has been little investigated outside Brazil The International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN has assessed its conservation status as near threatened 1 References edit a b c d e f g Carlson J Charvet P Blanco Parra MP Briones Bell lloch A Cardenosa D Derrick D Espinoza E Marcante F Morales Saldana J M Naranjo Elizondo B Schneider E V C amp Simpson N J 2020 Hypanus guttatus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T44592A104125629 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T44592A104125629 en Retrieved 26 May 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bailly Nicolas 2017 Hypanus guttatus Bloch amp Schneider 1801 WoRMS World Register of Marine Species Retrieved 11 July 2023 Catalog of Fishes Online Version Archived 2015 05 03 at the Wayback Machine California Academy of Sciences Retrieved on January 15 2010 Rosenberger L J Schaefer S A August 6 2001 Schaefer S A ed Phylogenetic Relationships within the Stingray Genus Dasyatis Chondrichthyes Dasyatidae Copeia 2001 3 615 627 doi 10 1643 0045 8511 2001 001 0615 PRWTSG 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85657403 a b c d McEachran J D amp M R de Carvalho 2002 Dasyatidae In Carpenter K E ed The Living Marine Resources of the Western Central Atlantic Volume 1 Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations pp 562 571 ISBN 92 5 104825 8 a b c d Leopold M 2004 Poissons de mer de Guyane Editions Quae pp 38 39 ISBN 2 84433 135 1 a b McEachran J D amp J D Fechhelm 1998 Fishes of the Gulf of Mexico Myxiniformes to Gasterosteiformes University of Texas Press p 176 ISBN 0 292 75206 7 a b Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2023 Hypanus guttatus in FishBase July 2023 version a b Yokota L amp R P Lessa 2007 Reproductive biology of three ray species Gymnura micrura Bloch amp Schneider 1801 Dasyatis guttata Bloch amp Schneider 1801 and Dasyatis marianae Gomes Rosa amp Gadig 2000 caught by artisanal fisheries in Northeastern Brazil Cahiers de Biologie Marine 48 249 257 Castro Aguirre J L amp H E Perez 1996 Catalogo Sistematico de las Rayas y Especies Afines de Mexico Chondrichthyes Elasmobranchii Rajiformes Batoideiomorpha UNAM p 44 ISBN 968 36 5623 4 Mayes M A amp D R Brooks 1981 Cestode parasites of some Venezuelan stingrays Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 93 4 1230 1238 Williams E H Jr L Bunkley Williams amp C J Sanner 1994 New host and locality records for copepod and isopod parasites of Colombian marine fishes Journal of Aquatic Animal Health 6 4 362 364 doi 10 1577 1548 8667 1994 006 lt 0362 NHALRF gt 2 3 CO 2 Portes Santos C A L Santos amp D I Gibson February 2006 A new species of Monocotyle Taschenberg 1878 Monogenea Monocotylidae from Dasyatis guttata Dasyatidae Journal of Parasitology 92 1 21 24 doi 10 1645 GE 603R 1 PMID 16629309 S2CID 20778168 a b c Yokota L amp R P Lessa March 2006 A nursery area for sharks and rays in northeastern Brazil Environmental Biology of Fishes 75 3 349 360 doi 10 1007 s10641 006 0038 9 S2CID 6178316 a b Thorson T B 1983 Observations on the morphology ecology and life history of the euryhaline stingray Dasyatis guttata Bloch and Schneider 1801 Acta Biologica Venezuelica 11 4 95 126 a b Batista da Silva G T Holando Basilio F C Pereira Nascimento amp A A Fonteles Filho 2007 Size at first sexual maturity of the sting rays Dasyatis guttata and Dasyatis americana off Ceara State Arquivos de Ciencias do Mar 40 2 14 18 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dasyatis guttata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Longnose stingray amp oldid 1165271130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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