Posted by: stufffromthelab | July 11, 2010

Sting ray

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Photo: Stingray gliding across the ocean floor

The stingray’s tail features a poisonous barb, which is used only in self-defense. Stingrays are generally docile and will swim close to divers and snorkelers without fear.

Photograph by Wolcott Henry

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Map

Map: Stingray rangeStingray Range

Fast Facts

Type:
Fish
Diet:
Carnivore
Average life span in the wild:
15 to 25 years
Size:
Up to 6.5 ft (2 m)
Weight:
Up to 790 lbs (350 kg)
Protection status:
Threatened
Did you know?
Ancient Greek dentists used the venom from the stingray’s spine as an anesthetic.
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration: Stingray compared with adult man

Stingrays are commonly found in the shallow coastal waters of temperate seas. They spend the majority of their time inactive, partially buried in sand, often moving only with the sway of the tide. The stingray’s coloration commonly reflects the seafloor’s shading, camouflaging it from predatory sharks and larger rays. Their flattened bodies are composed of pectoral fins joined to their head and trunk with an infamous tail trailing behind.

While the stingray’s eyes peer out from its dorsal side, its mouth, nostrils, and gill slits are situated on its underbelly. Its eyes are therefore not thought by scientists to play a considerable role in hunting. Like its shark relatives, the stingray is outfitted with electrical sensors called ampullae of Lorenzini. Located around the stingray’s mouth, these organs sense the natural electrical charges of potential prey. Many rays have jaw teeth to enable them to crush mollusks such as clams, oysters, and mussels.

When they are inclined to move, most stingrays swim by undulating their bodies like a wave; others flap their sides like wings. The tail may also be used to maneuver in the water, but its primary purpose is protection.

The stingray’s spine, or barb, can be ominously fashioned with serrated edges and a sharp point. The underside may produce venom, which can be fatal to humans, and which can remain deadly even after the stingray’s death. In Greek mythology, Odysseus, the great king of Ithaca, was killed when his son, Telegonus, struck him using a spear tipped with the spine of a stingray.

http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/kids/animals/creaturefeature/stingray/


Responses

  1. They have a tail that is poisonous and they use it for defense sting people.
    They eat Krill and they open their mouth that is located on their bottom and the food flows into it.
    By Dajore

  2. stingrays are related to sharks
    They are fish
    They can grow up to 6 feet.
    Their tale has a really sharp point at the end.
    They eat plants crabs , clams, fish.
    By Lexus

  3. They are sharks cousins
    They have poisonous tails
    They come in many shapes and sizes
    I learned the bigger rays eat the smaller rays
    Their eyes are on top
    The mouth and nostrils are under them
    The mask ray has a mouth in front of him

    By Joe C.

  4. They swim fast. They blend in with their sand
    .They have a poisonous tail to protect them. They have a mouth under their skin and eyes on top of their head.
    If you step on them they may attack, they don’t attack on purpose it is an accident.
    By Nagie

  5. Rays are flat. No bones made of cartilege, and don’t step on them, do the Stingray shuffle. They have stingers located at their tip of the tail can kill you.
    Their tails can be very long . they can grow up to 7 ft. and can weight 3000 lbs and they swim at the bottom ocean
    By Damonee


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