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Stingray

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Stingrays
Bluespotted stingray, Taeniura lymma
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Subclass:
Order:
Family:
Dasyatidae
Genera

Dasyatis
Himantura
Urogymnus]]
See text for species.

Dasyatids are common in tropical coastal waters throughout the world, and there are fresh water species in Asia (their large pectoral wings (commonly mistaken as "fins"). Their stinger is a razor-sharp, barbed, or serrated cartilaginous spine which grows from the ray's whip-like tail (like a fingernail), and can grow as long as 37 cm (about 14.6 inches). On the underside of the spine are two grooves containing venom-secreting glandular tissue. The entire spine is covered with a thin layer of skin called the integumentary sheath, in which venom is concentrated.[1] This gives them their common name of stingrays (a Portmanteau of "Stinger" and "Ray"), but the name can also be used to refer to any poisonous ray.

Some adult rays may be no larger than a human palm, while other species, like the short-tail stingray, may have a body of six feet in diameter, and an overall length, including their tail, of fourteen feet.

Stingrays may also be called the whip-tailed rays though this usage is much less common.

A group or collection of stingrays is commonly referred to as a "fever" of stingrays.

Feeding habits

Underside of freshwater ray showing mouth

Stingrays are flat so as to hide on the depths of the sea. They ruffle up the sand and hide beneath it. Since their eyes are on top of their body and their mouths on the bottom, stingrays cannot see their prey. Instead, they use the sense of smell and electro-receptors, similar to those of the shark. They feed primarily on mollusks and crustaceans and occasionally on small fish. Their mouths contain powerful, shell-crushing teeth. Rays settle on the bottom while feeding, sometimes leaving only their eyes and tail visible.

Stinging mechanism

A stingray in the Maldives.
A stingray's stinger
File:DSC01207.JPG
3 yellow-spotted stingrays at the Dallas World Aquarium.
Stingrays form a large part of the underwater display at the Melbourne Aquarium.

Dasyatids generally do not attack aggressively or even actively defend themselves. When threatened, their primary reaction is to swim away. However, when they are attacked by predators or stepped on, the barbed stinger in their tail is whipped up. This attack is normally ineffective against their main predator, sharks.[2] Humans are usually stung in the foot region (depending on the size of the stingray); it is also possible, although less likely, to be stung by brushing against the stinger. The stinger often breaks off in the wound, which is non-fatal to the stingray, and will be regrown. Contact with the stinger causes local trauma (from the cut itself), pain and swelling from the venom, and possible later infection from bacteria on parts of the stinger left in the wound. Immediate injuries to humans include, but are not limited to: poisoning, punctures, severed arteries and possibly death. Fatal stings are extremely rare.


Treatment for stings includes application of near-scalding water, which helps ease pain by denaturing the complex venom protein, and antibiotics. Immediate injection of local anesthetic in and around the wound is very helpful, as is the use of adjunct opiates such as intramuscular pethidine. Local anesthetic brings almost instant relief for several hours. Other possible pain remedies include papain (papaya extract, contained in unseasoned powdered meat tenderizer), which may break down the protein of the toxins, although this may be more appropriate for jellyfish and similar stings. One odd but usual method of pain relief is to urinate on the wound. The actual urine and sometimes vinegar are not benefitial themselves, but the warmth of the urine provides relief. Pain normally lasts up to 48 hours, but is most severe in the first 30–60 minutes and may be accompanied by nausea, fatigue, headaches, fever and chills. All stingray injuries should be medically assessed; the wound needs to be thoroughly cleaned, and surgical exploration is often required to remove any barb fragments remaining in the wound. Following cleaning, a radiograph is helpful to confirm removal of all the fragments.[3] However, not all remnants are radio-opaque; ultrasound imaging is useful in difficult cases.

Reproduction

Mating season occurs in the winter. When a male is courting a female, he will follow her closely, biting at her pectoral disc. During mating, the male will go on top of the female (his belly on her back) and put one of his claspers into her vent.[1]

Most rays are viviparous, bearing live young in "litters" of five to ten. The female holds the embryos in the womb without a placenta. Instead, the embryos absorb nutrients from a yolk sac, and after the sac is depleted the mother provides uterine milk. [2]

As food

Rays may be caught on a fishing line using small crabs as bait, and are often caught accidentally; they may also be speared from above. They are edible. Small rays may be cooked similarly to other fish, typically grilled or battered and fried. While not independently valuable as a food source, the stingray's capacity to damage shell fishing grounds can lead to bounties being placed on their removal. Also, they sometimes eat squid and crabs.

Stingray recipes abound throughout the world, with dried forms of the wings being most common. For example, in Malaysia and Singapore, stingray is commonly barbecued over charcoal, then served with spicy sambal sauce. Generally, the most prized parts of the stingray are the wings, the "cheek" (the area surrounding the eyes) and the liver. The rest of the ray is considered too rubbery to have any culinary uses.

In Iceland, eating pickled stingray ("kæst skata") on December 23 is an old tradition.[4]

Viewing

Stingray City in Grand Cayman allows swimmers, snorkelers, and divers to swim with and feed the stingrays.
File:Stingray-buried-in-sand.jpg
Stingrays can be seen burrowing into the sand just yards away from tourists at Stingray City.
A stingray's underside showing its mouth and gills.

Stingrays are usually very docile creatures. The customary reaction of the stingray is to immediately flee the vicinity of a disturbance. Nevertheless, certain larger species are located in waters where they are easily excitable due to possible attacks from feeding sharks and should be approached with caution, as the stingray's defensive reflex and effort to flee may result in human contact with the stinger, resulting in serious injury or even (though rarely) death.

Dasyatids are not normally visible to swimmers, but divers and snorkelers may find them in shallow sandy waters, more so when the water is unseasonably warm.

In the Cayman Islands, there are several dive sites called Stingray City, Grand Cayman, where divers and snorkelers can swim with large southern stingrays (Dasyatis Americana) and feed them by hand.

There is also a "Stingray City" in the sea surrounding the Caribbean island of Antigua. It consists of a large, shallow reserve where the rays live, and snorkelling is possible.

In Belize off the island of Ambergris Caye there is a popular marine sanctuary called Hol Chan. Here divers and snorkelers often gather to watch stingrays and nurse sharks that are drawn to the area by tour operators who feed the animals.

Many Tahitian island resorts regularly offer guests the chance to "feed the stingrays and sharks". This consists of taking a boat to the outer lagoon reefs then standing in waist-high water while habituated stingrays swarm around, pressing right up against you seeking food from your hand or tossed into the water. The boat owners also "call in" sharks, which when they arrive from the ocean swoop through the shallow water above the reef and snatch food offered to them.

Most major aquariums feature stingrays, including the National Baltimore Aquarium and the Tennessee Aquarium in Chattanooga. Where there are stingray touch tanks where visitors can "pet" rays or when show divers routinely hand feed rays in giant saltwater exhibits, for diver and visitor safety the spines on the rays are snipped off with a pair of pliers. The tip of the spine is then presented as a harmless stub that can't penetrate the skin of visitors or divers who routinely handle the docile rays.

The Atlantis Paradise Island Hotel houses many eagle rays, sting rays and one manta ray. The rays are often coexhibited with other marine life, such as the Caribbean reef shark. The Georgia Aquarium allows petting of southern stingrays in their "Georgia Explorer" exhibit. Similarly, visitors may use two fingers at a time to touch rays (with sting removed) and related guitarfish in outdoor exhibits at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach, California. Petting stingrays is also permitted in a special tank at the Blue Planet Aquarium, Ellesmere Port, England. Likewise, the Mote Marine Aquarium in Sarasota, Florida and the North Carolina Aquarium in Manteo, NC, allow visitors to pet a variety of rays in a controlled tank setting. Coral World Marine Park in St. Thomas, USVI, even allows supervised feeding of southern stingrays by visitors, as does Underwater Adventures Aquarium at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota. The London Aquarium in London, England, also has a touch tank where Aquarium visitors may touch a variety of small rays that live in a graduated-depth tank. The PPG Aquarium at the Pittsburgh Zoo also has a stingray tank where visitors can pet a variety of rays and small sharks, as well as crawl through a clear tunnel around the tank.

In 2006, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays added a 35 foot (10.7 m), 10 000 gallon (38 000 L), touch tank in their stadium where fans get a chance to interact with dozens of rays.[5]

Danger to humans

A stingray buried in the sand in Saba. Stingrays can be hard to see when they cover themselves with substrate.
A stingray in dark waters. Stingrays are dangerous for humans because it's hard to see them when they're in dark waters.

The most famous stingray-related injury is the one that resulted in Steve Irwin's death. On September 4, 2006, he was pierced in the chest with a stingray barb while snorkeling in Australia. He was killed from severe loss of blood from the heart to the abdominal cavity, and was dead by the time his team had brought aboard Croc II.

These chest-puncturing wounds are not typical, and most injuries that humans get from stingrays are because they step on one by accident. Stingrays are often semi-buried in the sand so they are easy to overlook. It is also possible to be bitten, but this is also a rare type of injury, since the mouth is on the bottom side of the ray. A good way to avoid stepping on a stingray while walking in shallow water is to slide your feet along the ground rather than taking steps (this is often referred to as the "stingray shuffle"). If a stingray feels something moving toward it, it will flee. If stepped on, however, its first reaction will be to sting.

Species

An Atlantic stingray
A thorntail stingray
An Himantura stingray

There are about seventy species in six genera:

References

  1. ^ Meyer P (1997). "Stingray injuries". Wilderness Environ Med. 8 (1): 24–8. PMID 11990133.
  2. ^ "Stingray City - About Stingrays". Caribbean Magazine.
  3. ^ Flint D, Sugrue W (1999). "Stingray injuries: a lesson in debridement". N Z Med J. 112 (1086): 137–8. PMID 10340692.
  4. ^ "Iceland's Christmas Foods". [http://www.foodmuseum.com/ The FOOD Museum. Retrieved 2006-12-23. {{cite web}}: External link in |work= (help)
  5. ^ "Way cool, but can they pitch?". St. Petersburg Times. July 13, 2006. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ Last, Manjaji-Matsumoto & Kailola (2006). "Himantura hortlei n. sp., a new species of whipray (Myliobatiformes: Dasyatidae) from Irian Jaya, Indonesia" (PDF). Zootaxa. 1239: 19–34.
  7. ^ Manjaji-Matsumoto & Last (2006). "Himantura lobistoma, a new whipray (Rajiformes: Dasyatidae) from Borneo, with comments on the status of Dasyatis microphthalmus". Ichthyological Research. 53 (3): 291ff.
  8. ^ Last, Manjaji & Yearsley (2005). "Pastinachus solocirostris sp. nov., a new species of Stingray (Elasmobranchii: Myliobatiformes) from the Indo-Malay Archipelago" (PDF). Zootaxa. 1040: 1–16.

Bibliography