Urolophids can be found in the eastern Indian Ocean, the western Pacific, the eastern Pacific from California to Chile, and the western Atlantic, including the Caribbean. They are not known in the western Indian Ocean, the Mediterranean, or the eastern Atlantic.
Biogeographic Regions: indian ocean (Native ); atlantic ocean (Native ); pacific ocean (Native )
Stingarees can cause serious wounds with their tail spines. The serrated spine tip can be difficult to remove without surgery if it breaks off in the wound. Because they tend to occupy shallow water and are often colored to blend in with the bottom, they are a hazard to waders. Some fishermen walk with a “stingray shuffle” to make the rays swim away without stepping on them and getting stung.
Negative Impacts: injures humans (bites or stings, venomous )
The family Urolophidae, also known as stingarees, consists of two genera and about 35 species. They are bottom-dwelling rays in warm seas, usually lying partially buried under the sand. Their rounded pectoral discs are colored to blend in with the sand, mud, or rocks on which they live. Urolophids are relatively small rays, and feed on a variety of invertebrates, small fishes, and crustaceans. Their tails, distinguished by the presence of a well-developed caudal fin, are equipped with one or more serrated stinging spines. Like other rays they are viviparous; urolophids give birth to between two and four young each year, or in some cases, every two years. Because of their low birth rates and sometimes restricted range, urolophids are susceptible to human activity, although only one species is currently known to be threatened.
Members of the family Urolophidae, like other rays and their shark relatives, employ a reproductive strategy that involves investing large amounts of energy into relatively few young over a lifetime. Once sexually mature, stingarees have only one litter per year, usually bearing two to four young. Since few young are produced, it is important that they survive, and to this end rays are born at a large size, able to feed and fend for themselves much like an adult. Rays develop from egg to juvenile inside the mother’s uterus, sometimes to almost half their adult size. In this system, called aplacental uterine viviparity, developing embryos receive most of their nutriment from a milky, organically rich substance secreted by the mother’s uterine lining. An embryo absorbs this substance, called histotroph, by ingestion, or through its skin or other specialized structures. Researchers have found that in some rays, the stomach and spiral intestine are among the first organs to develop and function, so that the embryo can digest the uterine “milk.” Rays’ eggs are small and insufficient to support the embryos until they are born, although the first stage of development does happen inside tertiary egg envelopes that enclose each egg along with egg jelly. The embryo eventually absorbs the yolk sac and stalk and the histotroph provides it with nutrition. Development in the uterus usually takes about three months.
One species in the Australian genus Urolophus is listed as near threatened. It lives in an area of intense fishing pressure, and females often abort embryos when captured. These factors, along with low fecundity (they bear only two young at a time), making it vulnerable to human activity. Other urolophids, sharing these characteristics, may become threatened in the future.
Rays perceive and interact with their environment using sensory channels common to many vertebrates: sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. Rays also belong to a group of fishes, the elasmobranchs, whose electrical sensitivity seems to exceed that of all other animals. Elasmobranch fishes are equipped with ampullae of Lorenzini, electroreceptor organs that contain receptor cells and canals leading to pores in the animal’s skin. Sharks and rays can detect the electrical patterns created by nerve conduction, muscular contraction, and even the ionic difference between a body (i.e. of prey) and water. In lab experiments, members of the family Urolophidae changed their feeding location according to artificially induced changes in the electrical field around them. Other experiments have demonstrated that cartilaginous fishes use electrosensory information not only to locate prey, but also for orientation and navigation based on the electrical fields created by the interaction between water currents and the earth’s magnetic field. Although some rays can produce an electric shock to defend themselves or stun prey, members of the family Urolophidae cannot. They are able, however, to inflict a venomous sting with their tail spine in defense.
Communication Channels: visual ; tactile ; chemical
Perception Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical ; electric ; magnetic
Stingarees are seldom used commercially even though large numbers are frequently caught in nets, but several species have edible flesh. Some are reported to be “chewy unless prepared properly.” Native peoples in many parts of the family’s range have used ray spines for spear tips, daggers, or whips.
Positive Impacts: food
In their benthic (on the bottom), warm, usually shallow-water habitat, stingarees affect the populations of prey animals such as invertebrates and small fishes. They in turn are eaten by larger fish and humans.
Many stingarees feed on fishes, worms, shrimps, and other small organisms they uncover when they flap their pectoral fins along the bottom. Some are able to eat hard-shelled mollusks and crustaceans.
Primary Diet: carnivore (Piscivore , Eats non-insect arthropods, Molluscivore )
Urolophidae is a marine family, although some members enter estuaries. Restricted to tropical and warm temperate waters, urolophids are bottom-dwellers along coastlines and along the continental shelf. Most live in relatively shallow water but some occupy depths of at least 700 m down the continental slope. They generally prefer sandy bottoms in which they can bury themselves, but a few species live on rocky substrates (bottoms) or in association with sea vegetation such as kelp. Urolophids tend to have patterns and coloring that blend in with their environment.
Habitat Regions: temperate ; tropical ; saltwater or marine
Aquatic Biomes: benthic ; coastal ; brackish water
Other Habitat Features: estuarine ; intertidal or littoral
Little specific information regarding lifespans in Urolophidae was found, but in general rays, like their relatives the sharks, grow and mature slowly and are long-lived.
Urolophids, or stingarees, are rays with a rounded, oval, or rhomboidal disc created by the pectoral fins. The disc is less than 1.3 times as broad as it is long. Their snouts are confluent with the rest of the disc. From the side they appear relatively flat, with the head not elevated. The spiracles (respiratory openings) are close behind the eyes, which are dorsolateral (above and to either side) on the head. The mouth is small and located on the underside of the snout, and often has several papillae on its floor. Teeth are small and do not form flat crushing plates as in some other rays. There are five pairs of small gill openings, and the internal gill arches do not have filter plates or ridges. Some stingarees lack a dorsal fin; in others the fin is small, located just in front of the sting and behind the pelvic fins. The serrated stinging spine, located about halfway down the tail, is large and functional. A distinguishing feature of these rays is the presence of a moderately large, elongated caudal fin that extends to the tip of the tail. In the genus Urolophus the caudal fin lobes are confluent, while in the genus Urotrygon they are separate. The tail is slender but not whip-like, and shorter than in stingrays. In coloration stingarees range from uniform grayish, yellowish, or brownish, to patterns of spots, reticulations, or dark mask-like bands. Their discs may be smooth or covered with small denticles. These rays tend to be small, not more than 76 cm in length.
Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry ; venomous
Ray spines, some of them likely belonging to urolophids, have been found embedded in the mouths of many sharks. The great hammerhead Sphyrna lewini, in particular, appears to specialize in eating stingrays. They use their hammer-shaped heads to knock a ray to the bottom, and then pin the ray, once again with its head, pivoting around to bite the ray’s disc until the ray succumbs and can be eaten. In addition to their defensive venomous sting, most stingarees have cryptic coloring that blends in with the sandy or rocky bottom. Some researchers describe stingarees as almost impossible to find unless they move.
Known Predators:
Anti-predator Adaptations: cryptic
Only a few species of elasmobranchs have been observed during courtship and mating. However, stingarees have a system that involves internal fertilization, so it can logically be inferred that mating communication between male and female must happen to an extent that allows the male to insert at least one of his two claspers (male reproductive organs that are modifications of the pelvic fins) into the female’s cloaca to deposit sperm. Elasmobranch fishes have relatively complex endocrine (hormonal) systems; based on knowledge of other vertebrates with similar systems, it is likely that females signal to males through chemical or behavioral cues to indicate when their hormonal state is appropriate for mating. In Urobatis jamaicensis researchers found that gland secretions seal the open groove on males’ claspers into a closed tube that protects semen from being diluted before it passes into the female. These secretions coagulate on contact with sea water, help transport sperm into the female, and provide lubrication for clasper insertion.
Pregnancy in at least some urolophids lasts about three months, generally spanning some period in the spring, summer, and fall. It may take up to two years, however, for the egg follicle to accumulate enough yolk for ovulation (release of an egg to be fertilized) as in the case of Urobatis halleri. This means that at least some stingarees may have litters only once every two years, but it is likely that other groups within the family give birth on a yearly cycle. Within any given group of rays, individuals appear to go through mating, gestation, and parturition (birth) at the same time as all the other females in the group. Stingarees usually bear between two and four young at a time, after nourishing the embryos with milky fluid (histotroph) secreted by the uterus (see Development for a description of this system, called aplacental uterine viviparity). In some groups the epithelium, or wall, of the uterus is modified to form trophonemata, elongated villi that extend into the uterine cavity to provide greater surface area for respiratory exchange and histotroph excretion. This advanced system of nourishing young inside the uterus can produce offspring that are relatively large at birth (see Development). According to one investigator, a young ray is rolled up like a cigar during birth, which, along with the lubricating histotroph, facilitates the birth of such proportionally large young. The young ray then unrolls and swims away. Likewise, sting-bearing young are able to pass out of the mother’s body without stinging her because their stings are encased in a pliable sheath that sloughs off after birth.
Key Reproductive Features: iteroparous ; seasonal breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; fertilization (Internal ); viviparous
No reported evidence of post-birth parental care in Urolophidae was found. After such extended nurturing inside their mothers’ bodies, young rays come into the sea quite able to feed and fend for themselves (see Development and Reproduction).
Parental Investment: female parental care
Die Rundstechrochen (Urolophidae) sind in warmen Bereichen im Atlantik und im Indopazifik verbreitet.
Die eher kleinen Rochen werden 11 bis 80 Zentimeter lang. Sie haben eine kleine Schwanzflosse, die einen gesägten Stachel trägt. Einige australische Arten der Gattung Trygonoptera besitzen auch eine Rückenflosse. Ihre Körperscheibe ist ungefähr 1,3 mal breiter als lang. Rundstechrochen sind lebendgebärend.
Es gibt drei Gattungen mit 24 Arten:
Die Rundstechrochen (Urolophidae) sind in warmen Bereichen im Atlantik und im Indopazifik verbreitet.
The Urolophidae are a family of rays in the order Myliobatiformes, commonly known as stingarees or round stingrays. This family formerly included the genera Urobatis and Urotrygon of the Americas, which are presently recognized as forming their own family Urotrygonidae. Stingarees are found in the Indo-Pacific region, with the greatest diversity off Australia. They are sluggish, bottom-dwelling fish that have been recorded from shallow waters close to shore to deep waters over the upper continental slope. Measuring between 15 and 80 cm (5.9 and 31.5 in) long, these rays have oval to diamond-shaped pectoral fin discs and relatively short tails that terminate in leaf-shaped caudal fins, and may also have small dorsal fins and lateral skin folds. Most are smooth-skinned, and some have ornate dorsal color patterns.
Stingarees feed on or near the sea floor, consuming small invertebrates and occasionally bony fishes. They are aplacental viviparous, meaning their embryos emerge from eggs inside the uterus, and are sustained to term first by yolk and later by maternally produced histotroph ("uterine milk"). As far is known, the gestation period lasts around a year and litter sizes tend to be small. Stingarees have one or two relatively large, venomous stinging spines on their tail for defense, with which they can inflict a painful wound on humans. Generally, stingarees have no economic value. Some species form a substantial component of the bycatch of commercial trawl fisheries.
The German biologists Johannes Müller and Jakob Henle created the genus Urolophus in 1837;[1] in their subsequent 1838–41 Systematische Beschreibung der Plagiostomen, the pair created the genus Trygonoptera and also made the first reference to the urolophids as a group.[2] The family has traditionally also included the genera Urobatis and Urotrygon of the Americas; John McEachran, Katherine Dunn, and Tsutomu Miyake moved them to their own family, Urotrygonidae, in 1996.[3]
Recent phylogenetic analyses have confirmed the urolophids and related taxa belong to the order Myliobatiformes; they were once placed in the order Rajiformes with the guitarfishes and skates.[4] Based on morphological characters, John McEachran and Neil Aschliman determined in a 2004 study that the urolophids formed a clade with the giant stingaree (Plesiobatis daviesi), and that the two were basal to a clade containing all other myliobatiform families except Platyrhinidae, Hexatrygonidae, and Zanobatidae. They proposed including Plesiobatis in the family Urolophidae, and classifying the family within the superfamily Urolophoidea within Myliobatiformes.[5]
The center of biodiversity for stingarees is Australia, where all 6 Trygonoptera and 15 of the 22 Urolophus species are endemic.[6][7] A number of species are also found in the Coral Sea, a few in the Malay Archipelago, and one (the sepia stingray, U. aurantiacus) in the northwestern Pacific.[6][8] Stingarees are bottom-dwelling rays that can be found from very shallow, inshore habitats such as estuaries and bays, to a depth of 420 m (1,380 ft) well offshore on the upper continental shelf.[8] Some are extremely common; one study in the coastal waters of southwestern Australia found that the four most abundant stingaree species constituted over 17% of the biomass of benthic fishes.[9]
Stingarees are modestly sized, ranging from 30 to 80 cm (12 to 31 in) long. They have greatly enlarged pectoral fins fused to the head, forming a disc that may be nearly circular, to oval, to rhomboid in shape. The snout is usually short and does not protrude much from the disc. The eyes are placed atop the disc and usually fairly large; immediately posterior are teardrop-shaped spiracles (auxiliary respiratory openings). There is a curtain of skin between the nostrils, formed from the fusion of the anterior nasal flaps, that reaches the mouth. There are varying numbers of papillae (nipple-like structures) on the floor of the mouth and sometimes also on the outside of the lower jaw. The teeth in both jaws are small, with rhomboid bases and blunt to pointed crowns; they are arranged with a quincunx pattern and number less than 50 rows in either jaw. The five pairs of gill slits are short and located beneath the disc.[7][8]
The pelvic fins are small with rounded margins; claspers are found on males. The tail is shorter than to about equal to the disc, either flattened or thickly oval in cross-section, and ends in a leaf-shaped, symmetrical caudal fin. One or two relatively large, serrated stinging spines are placed atop the tail about halfway along its length. Some species have a small dorsal fin immediately before the spine, and/or lateral skin folds running along either side of the tail.[7][8] All species lack dermal denticles (except for the New Ireland stingaree, U. armatus).[10] Stingarees are generally shades of yellow, green, brown or gray above and pale below; some species are plain, while others are adorned with spots, rings, blotches, lines, or more complex patterns.[8]
Stingarees are slow swimmers that can often be found lying still on the bottom, sometimes partly or completely buried in sediment. They are predators of small benthic and burrowing invertebrates such as crustaceans and polychaete worms, and also occasionally small bony fishes.[8] Studies have shown that stingarees that overlap in range differ in their diet composition, which likely serves to reduce competition. For example, off southwestern Australia the masked stingaree (T. personata) and western shovelnose stingaree (T. mucosa) feed mostly on different types of polychaetes, while the sparsely-spotted stingaree (U. paucimaculatus) and lobed stingaree (U. lobatus) feed mostly on different types of crustaceans.[9]
Like other myliobatiforms, stingarees have a viviparous mode of reproduction in which the embryos hatch within the uterus and are nourished first by yolk, and later by histotroph ("uterine milk") produced by the mother and likely delivered through specialized extensions of the uterine epithelium called "trophonemata". For those species whose life histories have been investigated, the gestation period lasts 10–12 months and the litter size is small, no more than one or two in some cases.[7][8] The small litter is likely due to the relatively large size of stingaree pups, which measure around half the maximum size at birth.[11]
Though generally innocuous towards humans, when disturbed stingarees can inflict a painful wound with their stout, venomous stings. Species differ in temperament; the sparse-spotted stingaree (U. paucimaculatus) is reportedly more aggressive, and the spotted stingaree (U. gigas) less so. When threatened, the crossback stingaree (U. cruciatus) raises its tail over its disc like a scorpion.[12] Some species of stingarees are regularly caught incidentally in bottom trawls by commercial fisheries. They are generally discarded due to their small size, though some may be processed into fishmeal.[7][8] Stingarees caught from shallow water likely have relatively high chances of survival, but of concern is their tendency to abort any gestating young when captured and handled.[13][14]
The Urolophidae are a family of rays in the order Myliobatiformes, commonly known as stingarees or round stingrays. This family formerly included the genera Urobatis and Urotrygon of the Americas, which are presently recognized as forming their own family Urotrygonidae. Stingarees are found in the Indo-Pacific region, with the greatest diversity off Australia. They are sluggish, bottom-dwelling fish that have been recorded from shallow waters close to shore to deep waters over the upper continental slope. Measuring between 15 and 80 cm (5.9 and 31.5 in) long, these rays have oval to diamond-shaped pectoral fin discs and relatively short tails that terminate in leaf-shaped caudal fins, and may also have small dorsal fins and lateral skin folds. Most are smooth-skinned, and some have ornate dorsal color patterns.
Stingarees feed on or near the sea floor, consuming small invertebrates and occasionally bony fishes. They are aplacental viviparous, meaning their embryos emerge from eggs inside the uterus, and are sustained to term first by yolk and later by maternally produced histotroph ("uterine milk"). As far is known, the gestation period lasts around a year and litter sizes tend to be small. Stingarees have one or two relatively large, venomous stinging spines on their tail for defense, with which they can inflict a painful wound on humans. Generally, stingarees have no economic value. Some species form a substantial component of the bycatch of commercial trawl fisheries.
Los urolófidos (Urolophidae) son una familia de peces cartilaginosos, elasmobranquios del orden Rajiformes, con forma discoidal o redondeada, que agrupa al menos 44 especies.
Hay 44 especies en cuatro géneros:
Los urolófidos (Urolophidae) son una familia de peces cartilaginosos, elasmobranquios del orden Rajiformes, con forma discoidal o redondeada, que agrupa al menos 44 especies.
Urolophidae arrain miliobatiformeen familia da.[1] Ameriketako ur epel eta tropikaletan bizi dira.
Hona hemen FishBasek proposatzen duen espezieen zerrenda:
Urolophidae arrain miliobatiformeen familia da. Ameriketako ur epel eta tropikaletan bizi dira.
Kiekkorauskut (Urolophidae) on rustokalaheimo, jonka lajeja tavataan Tyynellämerellä.
Kiekkorauskujen heimoon luetaan kuuluvaksi kaksi sukua Urolophus ja Trygonoptera ja lajeja näissä on yhteensä vähintään 24. Joskus näitä sukuja pidetään synonyymeinä. Aikaisemmin heimoon luettiin kuuluvaksi myös Yhdysvaltain Tyynenmerenrannikolla ja Atlantissa tavattavat Urotygon- ja Urobatis-sukujen lajit. Nykyään ne kuitenkin useimmiten sijoitetaan Urotrygonidae-heimoon.[2][3][4]
Kiekkorauskut ovat melko pieniä rauskuja ja ovat pituudeltaan yleensä alle 76 senttimetriä. Ruumis on litteä ja leveät rintaevät antavat sille pyöreän tai soikean muodon. Pyrstö on pitkähkö ja siinä on yksi tai useampia sahalaitaista myrkyllistä piikkiä. Lajien suu on pieni ja hampaat ovat pienet eivätkä levymäiset kuten monilla muilla rauskuilla. Kalat ovat vivipaarisia.[2][3][4][5]
Kiekkorauskuja tavataan Tyynenmeren länsiosista. Lajit elävät merenpohjalla usein osittain hiekkaan hautautuneena, kivikkopohjilla tai kasvillisuuden joukossa. Kiekkorauskulajien ravintoa ovat kalat, katkaravut ja madot.[2][3][4]
Kiekkorauskut (Urolophidae) on rustokalaheimo, jonka lajeja tavataan Tyynellämerellä.
Urolophidae est une famille de raies.
Selon ITIS (14 octobre 2014)[1] :
Selon FishBase (14 octobre 2014)[2] et World Register of Marine Species (14 octobre 2014)[3] :
Gli Urolophidae sono una famiglia di pesci cartilaginei marini appartenenti all'ordine Myliobatiformes.
La famiglia è presente in tutti gli oceani nelle fasce tropicali e subtropicali. Molte specie vivono nei mari australiani. Non sono presenti nel mar Mediterraneo[1].
Sono complessivamente simili ai Dasyatidae o Myliobatidae presenti nei mari europei. Hanno una pinna caudale sviluppata al termine della coda, che è di media lunghezza. Le pinne pettorali si uniscono davanti al muso. In genere sono presenti una o più spine velenifere sulla coda[1].
La maggior parte delle specie non supera qualche decina di centimetri di lunghezza. La taglia massima si aggira sugli 80 cm[2].
Gli Urolophidae sono una famiglia di pesci cartilaginei marini appartenenti all'ordine Myliobatiformes.
Trumpauodegės dygliuotosios rajos (lot. Urolophidae, angl. Round rays, vok. Runde Stechrochen) – rombinių rajožuvių (Rajiformes) šeima. Paplitusios vidutinio ir tropinio klimato vandenyse. Dauguma rūšių turi nuodingus nugarinius dyglius.
Šeimoje yra 4 gentys, 44 rūšys.
Trumpauodegės dygliuotosios rajos (lot. Urolophidae, angl. Round rays, vok. Runde Stechrochen) – rombinių rajožuvių (Rajiformes) šeima. Paplitusios vidutinio ir tropinio klimato vandenyse. Dauguma rūšių turi nuodingus nugarinius dyglius.
Šeimoje yra 4 gentys, 44 rūšys.
Doornroggen (Urolophidae) zijn een familie van roggen uit de orde Myliobatiformes. Ze komen voor in alle gematigde en tropische oceanen. De meeste soorten hebben een giftige stekel op de staart. ITIS onderscheidt binnen deze familie vier geslachten. Over deze indeling bestaat geen consensus. De geslachten Urobatis en Urotrygon worden ook wel in een aparte familie Urotrygonidae samen genomen.
Doornroggen (Urolophidae) zijn een familie van roggen uit de orde Myliobatiformes. Ze komen voor in alle gematigde en tropische oceanen. De meeste soorten hebben een giftige stekel op de staart. ITIS onderscheidt binnen deze familie vier geslachten. Over deze indeling bestaat geen consensus. De geslachten Urobatis en Urotrygon worden ook wel in een aparte familie Urotrygonidae samen genomen.
Urolophidae é uma família de raias com 35 espécies reconhecidas, agrupadas em dois géneros.[1] Ocorrem nos três principais oceanos e são exclusivamente marinhas. A maioria das espécies tem um ou mais espinhos na cauda.
Urolophidae é uma família de raias com 35 espécies reconhecidas, agrupadas em dois géneros. Ocorrem nos três principais oceanos e são exclusivamente marinhas. A maioria das espécies tem um ou mais espinhos na cauda.
За розміром вони в середньому менші представників інших родин скатів і їх величина коливається від 11 до 80 см. Диск має майже круглу форму. Відрізняються добре розвиненим хвостовник плавцем з розвиненими хрящевими променями. На хвості присутні 1 чи 2 зубчасті шипи.
Майже завжди тримаються на піщаному або мулистому ґрунті, в який можуть зариватися. За допомогою грудних плавців ці скати розкопують м'який мул, витягуючи з нього свою здобич — хробаків, крабів, дрібних рибок. Як і інші скати, відрізняються живородінням.
Зустрічаються в теплих регіонах Атлантичного океану, а також на рубежі Індійського і Тихого океану.
Urolophidae J. P. Müller & Henle, 1841
Короткохвостые хвостоколы или толстохвостые хвостоколы[1] (лат. Urolophidae) — семейство хрящевых рыб подотряда Myliobatoidei отряда хвостоколообразных. Встречаются в тёплых регионах Атлантического океана, а также на рубеже Индийского и Тихого океана, наибольшее разнообразие видов наблюдается у побережья Австралии. В настоящее время к семейству относят 2 рода. Это медлительные донные рыбы, которые встречаются от прибрежного мелководья до глубин в верхней части материкового склона. Размер колеблется от 15 до 80 см. Широкие грудные плавники образуют ромбовидный диск, довольно короткий хвост оканчивается хвостовым плавником в форме листа. У некоторых родов имеются небольшие спинные плавники и латеральные кожаные складки. Кожа большинства видов лишена чешуи. Окраска ровная или пёстрая.
Рацион состоит из донных животных, включая мелких беспозвоночных и иногда костистых рыб. Короткохвостые хвостоколы размножаются яйцеживорождением. Эмбрионы вылупляются из яиц внутри матки матери и питаются желтком, а позднее гистотрофом. Беременность длится около года, размер помёта невелик. У этих скатов на хвосте имеется один или два довольно крупных ядовитых шипа, которые служат для защиты и могут нанести человеку болезненные раны. В целом короткохвостые хвостоколы не представляют интереса для коммерческого рыболовства.
Впервые новый вид уролофов вид был научно описан немецкими биологами Иоганном Петером Мюллером и Фридрихом Густавом Генле в 1837 году[2]. В своём последующем труде учёные создали вид тригоноптер и первый раз упомянули короткохвостых хвостоколов как группу[3]. К семейству короткохвостых хвостоколов также традиционно относили род Urobatis и род уротригонов[1], которые в 1996 году были выделены в отдельное семейство Urotrygonidae[4].
На основании морфологических характеристик в 2004 был сделан вывод, что короткохвостые хвостоколы образуют кладу с Plesiobatis daviesi и формируют базальную кладу семейств отряда хвостоколообразных, за исключением платириновых, шестижаберных скатов и Zanobatidae. Тогда же было предложено отнести род Plesiobatis к семейству короткохвостых хвостоколов и классифицировать семейство принадлежащим к надсемейству Urolophoidea внутри отряда хвостоколообразных[5].
Название семейства происходит от слов греч. οὐρά — «хвост» и др.-греч. λόφος — «гребень»[6].
Центр видового разнообразия короткохвостых хвостоколов находится у берегов Австралии, где обитают все 6 видов тригоноптеров и 22 вида уролофов[7][8]. Многочисленные виды этого семейства распространены в Коралловом море, несколько встречаются в Малайском архипелаге, и один, оранжево-красный веслохвост, в северо-западной части Тихого океана[7][9]. Короткохвостые хвостоколы встречаются от прибрежного мелководья, например, эстуариев рек и лагун, до глубины 420 м в открытом море, в верхней части материкового склона[9]. В некоторых местах они чрезвычайно распространены: в одном исследовании, проведённом у юго-западного побережья Австралии, было обнаружено, что эти скаты составляли до 17 % от биомассы всех донных рыб[10].
Короткохвостые хвостоколы имеют средний размер, их длина колеблется от 30 до 80 см. Их широкие грудные плавники сливаются с головой и образуют диск в виде круга, овала или ромба. Как правило рыло короткое и не выступает за границы диска. Довольно крупные глаза расположены в верхней части диска, позади глаз имеются каплевидные брызгальца. Между ноздрями пролегает кожаный лоскут, образованный сращенными внешними назальными складками, которые достигают рта. Дно ротовой полости и иногда наружный край нижней челюсти покрывают пальцевидные отростки. Зубы мелкие, с ромбовидными основаниями и притуплёнными кончиками. Они собраны в шахматном порядке рядами, число которых не превышает 50 на обеих челюстях. На вентральной поверхности диска расположены пять пар коротких жаберных щелей[8][9].
Края небольших брюшных плавников закруглены. У самцов имеются птеригоподии. Длина хвоста короче или равна длине диска. Хвост имеет сплюснутое или овальное поперечное сечение и оканчивается листовидным симметричным хвостовым плавником. На дорсальной поверхности хвоста расположен один или два крупных зазубренных шипа по длине примерно равных половине хвоста. У некоторых видов имеются небольшие спинные плавники, которые находятся непосредственно перед шипами и/или латеральные кожаные складки на хвостовом стебле[8][9]. У всех видов за исключением Urolophus armatus кожа лишена чешуи[11]. Окраска разных оттенков жёлтого, зелёного, коричневого и серого цветов с пятнышками и полосами или ровная, вентральная поверхность бледная[9].
Короткохвостые хвостоколы — медлительные рыбы, которые часто неподвижно лежат на дне, частично или полностью зарывшись под осадками. Они охотятся на донных беспозвоночных, в том числе тех, которые живут в грунте (ракообразные, полихеты), и иногда на небольших рыб[9]. Исследования показали, что рационы короткохвостых хвостоколов, разделяющих один и тот же участок обитания, отличаются, что, вероятно, снижает конкуренцию. Например, обитающие у юго-западного побережья Австралии Trygonoptera personata и Trygonoptera mucosa питаются разными видами многощетинковых червей, тогда как Urolophus paucimaculatus и Urolophus lobatus — разными видами ракообразных[10].
Подобно прочим хвостоколообразным короткохвостые хвостоколы размножаются яйцеживорождением. Первоначально эмбрионы питаются желтком, а позднее гистотрофом, который вырабатывается организмом матери и поступает через специальное продолжение эпителия матки — «трофонемату». Беременность длится около 10—12 месяцев. Помёт немногочисленный, 1 или 2 новорожденных[8][9]. Длина новорождённых составляет примерно половину длины взрослого ската[12].
Короткохвостые хвостоколы способны нанести человеку болезненный укол своими ядовитыми и острыми шипами. Некоторые виды ведут себя довольно агрессивно, например, Urolophus paucimaculatus. В случае угрозы полосатый уролоф приподнимает хвост над диском подобно скорпиону[13]. В качестве прилова эти скаты иногда попадаются при коммерческом промысле. Пойманных рыб, как правило, выбрасывают за борт, хотя из них можно производить рыбную муку. Длительная беременность и малочисленное потомство делают их статус сохранности уязвимым.
Короткохвостые хвостоколы или толстохвостые хвостоколы (лат. Urolophidae) — семейство хрящевых рыб подотряда Myliobatoidei отряда хвостоколообразных. Встречаются в тёплых регионах Атлантического океана, а также на рубеже Индийского и Тихого океана, наибольшее разнообразие видов наблюдается у побережья Австралии. В настоящее время к семейству относят 2 рода. Это медлительные донные рыбы, которые встречаются от прибрежного мелководья до глубин в верхней части материкового склона. Размер колеблется от 15 до 80 см. Широкие грудные плавники образуют ромбовидный диск, довольно короткий хвост оканчивается хвостовым плавником в форме листа. У некоторых родов имеются небольшие спинные плавники и латеральные кожаные складки. Кожа большинства видов лишена чешуи. Окраска ровная или пёстрая.
Рацион состоит из донных животных, включая мелких беспозвоночных и иногда костистых рыб. Короткохвостые хвостоколы размножаются яйцеживорождением. Эмбрионы вылупляются из яиц внутри матки матери и питаются желтком, а позднее гистотрофом. Беременность длится около года, размер помёта невелик. У этих скатов на хвосте имеется один или два довольно крупных ядовитых шипа, которые служат для защиты и могут нанести человеку болезненные раны. В целом короткохвостые хвостоколы не представляют интереса для коммерческого рыболовства.
見內文
本科魚類廣泛分布於各大洋。
水深3至200公尺以上。
扁魟科下分3個屬,如下:
本科是所有魟魚中唯一具有尾鳍者,尾鳍上有辐状软骨支撑。尾部較體盤前後徑略長,但亦有少數種類略短。尾部上方有一強棘,棘之兩側具有鋸齒緣並會分泌毒液。
本科魚類廣泛分布於全球各大洋,有些具有地域性,大部分為海水魚,有時見於河口,少部分則生活於南美洲、非洲及東南亞淡水水域。活動力差,通常將身體埋於沙泥中,僅露出雙眼和呼吸孔,或利用胸鰭做波浪狀的運動而貼游於底層水域。屬肉食性,以小魚、甲殼類及軟體動物為食。卵胎生。
食用魚,但味道較腥,以紅燒為宜,或當作下雜魚處理。
흰가오리과(Urolophidae)는 매가오리목에 속하는 연골어류 과의 하나이다.[1] 이전에 이 과에 포함시켰던 우로바티스속(Urobatis)과 우로트리곤속(Urotrygon)은 이제 우로트리곤과라는 별도의 과로 분류한다. 인도-태평양 지역에서 발견되며, 오스트레일리아에 가장 많이 분포한다. 움직임이 느린 저생 어류로 해안가의 수심이 얕은 곳부터 대륙사면 상부의 심해 바닥에서 서식하는 것으로 알려져 있다. 몸길이는 15-80cm 정도이며, 가슴지느러미 판은 타원형부터 마름모꼴 형태를 띤다.
흰가오리과(Urolophidae)는 매가오리목에 속하는 연골어류 과의 하나이다. 이전에 이 과에 포함시켰던 우로바티스속(Urobatis)과 우로트리곤속(Urotrygon)은 이제 우로트리곤과라는 별도의 과로 분류한다. 인도-태평양 지역에서 발견되며, 오스트레일리아에 가장 많이 분포한다. 움직임이 느린 저생 어류로 해안가의 수심이 얕은 곳부터 대륙사면 상부의 심해 바닥에서 서식하는 것으로 알려져 있다. 몸길이는 15-80cm 정도이며, 가슴지느러미 판은 타원형부터 마름모꼴 형태를 띤다.