Species Hierarchy
Kingdom ANIMAL (ANIMALIA)
Phylum BACKBONED ANIMALS (CHORDATA)
Class SHARKS AND RAYS (ELASMOBRANCHI)
Order STINGRAYS AND MANTA RAYS (RAJIFORMES)
Family STINGRAYS (DASYATIDAE)
Common name: STINGRAY - ROUND
Scentific name: UROLOPHUS HALLERI

Origin: WEST MEXICO

Species Info:

This lifeform is found in the eastern Pacific from California to Peru.

Round Stingray (Urolophus halleri) is found along the Pacific Coast from Santa Barbara, California, to Panama. This Stingray is typically about one and one half feet across. The Yellow Stingray (U. jamaicensis) is closely related and found in the Atlantic Ocean from the Carolinas to the Caribbean.

Stingrays (Family Dasyatidae) are a group of rays with wide disks and a longish tail with one (or more) venomous stinger(s). Stingrays frequently lie buried in the sand with only their eyes showing.  There are about 120 (190 per Allen) species of stingrays worldwide. Although stingrays are not aggressive, accidentally stepping on one can cause it to sting. Over 1,200 stingray stabbings are reported in the United States each year.

Stingrays and manta rays (Order Myliobatiformes) contain the familiar skates, rays, and sawfishes. They are basically flat fish with both eyes on the top of the head and gill slits on the ventral side of the body. They appear to swim with the sides of the body flapping up and down as opposed to the conventional fish approach of using fin and tail motions for locomotion.

Sharks and rays (Elasmobranchi), cartilaginous fishes, deserve to be a class separate from the normal fish, in that they do not have a bone skeleton but rather a cartilage skeleton.

Fertilization is internal in this class which also separates them from the bony fish class. Although there are a few fresh water species, the majority of the species in this class are found in salt water. As of 2005, there were about 500 known species of sharks and about 600 known species of rays.

David Ebert, author of a recent book on sharks, rays, and chimaeras of California, counts a total of 988 described species in the class with about 150 additional species awaiting scientific description. He breaks down the described species to 410 species of sharks, 543 species of rays, and 35 species of chimaeras.

Backboned Animals (Phylum Chordata) are the most advanced group of animals on earth. These animals are characterized by having a spinal cord or backbone. Most members have a clearly defined brain that controls the organism through a spinal cord. Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals are in this phylum.

Currently, some taxonomists believe that the fish should be divided into two groups (sharks and regular fishes) and that there are some other primitive groups in the phylum such as hagfish or lampreys.

Animal Kingdom contains numerous organisms that feed on other animals or plants. Included in the animal kingdom are the lower marine invertebrates such as sponges and corals, the jointed legged animals such as insects and spiders, and the backboned animals such as fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.

 

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