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Dasyatis marmorata Marbled stingray

Dasyatis marmorata is commonly referred to as Marbled stingray. Difficulty in the aquarium: There are no reports available yet that this animal has already been kept in captivity successfully. Toxicity: Has a poison harmful to health.


Profilbild Urheber Prof. Dr. Eric Clua, Französisch-Polynesien

Foto: Mauritanien, Nordwest-Afrika, Ostatlantik


Courtesy of the author Prof. Dr. Eric Clua, Französisch-Polynesien . Please visit www.ericclua.com for more information.

Uploaded by AndiV.

Image detail


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lexID:
12952 
AphiaID:
271445 
Scientific:
Dasyatis marmorata 
German:
Marmorierter Stechrochen 
English:
Marbled Stingray 
Category:
Raies 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Chordata (Phylum) > Elasmobranchii (Class) > Myliobatiformes (Order) > Dasyatidae (Family) > Dasyatis (Genus) > marmorata (Species) 
Initial determination:
(Steindachner, ), 1892 
Occurrence:
Gambia, Ghana, Benin, Tunesien, Angola, Cameroon, Congo, East-Atlantic Ocean, Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Israel, Liberia, Mauritania, Morocco, Namibia, Northern Africa, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Atlantic, South-Africa, The Aegan Sea (Mediterranean), The Gulf of Guinea, the Ivory Coast, the Mediterranean Sea, Tonga, West-Atlantic Ocean 
Sea depth:
12 - 100 Meter 
Size:
up to 23.62" (60 cm) 
Temperature:
18,6 °F - 82.58 °F (18,6°C - 28.1°C) 
Food:
Amphipods, Crustaceans, Fish (little fishes), Flatfish, Invertebrates, Mantis shrimps, Mysis, omnivore, Predatory, Schrimps, Snails, Tuna, Worms, Zoobenthos 
Difficulty:
There are no reports available yet that this animal has already been kept in captivity successfully 
Offspring:
Not available as offspring 
Toxicity:
Has a poison harmful to health 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Data deficient (DD) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life
:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2020-04-15 14:14:14 

Poison

Attention! Dasyatis marmorata possède un venin nocif pour votre santé. Normalement les espèces de cette catégorie n’émettent pas de danger pour vous. Lisez bien les informations et les commentaires des utilisateurs qui possèdent Dasyatis marmorata pour pouvoir mieux évaluer une possibilité de danger. Soyez prudents avec Dasyatis marmorata. Chaque humain réagit différemment sur des venins. Si vous pensez d'avoir été en contact avec le venin consultez un médecin ou un centre antipoison. Le numéro des centres A
s
antipoison sont trouvables ici: European Association of Poisons Centres and Clinical Toxicologists

Info

The Marbled Stingray is originally native to the waters from West Africa to South Africa, where the stingray is found on continental shelves on various types of sandy and muddy substrates at depths between 12 and 65 metres.

Dasyatis marmorata was recorded in the northeastern Mediterranean in 1892, and since 1993 it has been found in the southern part of the Mediterranean Sea.
Earlier records were limited to Tunisia, Israel and, more recently, Turkey.
In the last three areas, the distribution of the species at depths of less than 50 m indicates a preference for shallower waters, although rays have also been caught in the Gulf of Antalya at depths of between 50 and 100 m. This indicates that the ray may seek deeper waters than previously known, while shallow waters may be used as a nursery.

In February 2019, a juvenile male stingray was caught during a land survey in the Gulf of Maliakos in the central Aegean Sea, Greece. The stingray was examined in the fisheries laboratory of the Greek Centre for Marine Research (HCMR) in Athens and identified as Dasyatis marmorata.
Morphological characteristics were recorded and a DNA barcode was applied to confirm the identification of the species. The combination of the two methods verified the presence of the marble ray in Greek waters. This is therefore the first evidence of Dasyatis marmorata from the Aegean Sea.

Although the Marbled Stingray has migrated and reproduced in the Mediterranean Sea, there is no record of this ray as an invasive species in the Global invasive species database or in the Invasive Species Compendium (CAB International).
It seems very likely that the ray has found its way through the Strait of Gibraltar into the Mediterranean Sea.

A pregnant female can have up to four litters per year (after a gestation period of three months) with up to nine young.

Dasyatis marmorata stands out due to many larger bruises on the back. The most similar is the blue stingray Dasyatis chrysonota (Smith, 1828)

Synonyms:
Dasyatis chrysonota marmorata (stone roofer, 1892)
Trygon pastinaca marmorata stone roofer, 1892

We would like to thank Prof. Dr. Eric Clua, French Polynesia, for the first photo of the ray.

Synonyms
Dasyatis chrysonota marmorata (Steindachner, 1892)
Trygon pastinaca marmorata Steindachner, 1892

If you want to find out about the size of rays in specialist literature, usually written in English, you will often come across two abbreviations that ultimately mean the same thing: DW or WD.
If you look at FishBase, WoRMS or first descriptions of rays, you will find these abbreviations.
The total length including shoal is only rarely given, the TL.

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