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Spotted Eagle Ray

Aetobatus narinari

Photo by moralcoral
Published on Project Noah
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20.8398, -86.8878

Field Notes

Description:

A cartilaginous fish found in shallow coastal water by coral reefs and bays, in depths down to 80 meters (260 ft).[2] It is a member of the eagle ray family, and can be found globally in tropical regions, including the Gulf of Mexico, Hawaii, Atlantic Africa, the Indian Ocean, Oceania, and the Pacific west coast of the Americas. The spotted eagle ray can be identified by its numerous white spots or rings on its blue dorsal surface, white ventral surface, long, whip-like tail, and distinctive head that somewhat resembles a bill. It preys mainly upon bivalves, shrimps, crabs, whelks, and other benthic infauna. The spotted eagle ray's specialized chevron-shaped tooth structure helps it crush the hard shells of mollusks. The largest specimens can grow up to a maximum wingspan of 3 meters (10 ft) and a mass of 230 kilograms (510 lb).[2][3] It has a notably long tail in relation to other rays: the total length of a mature ray can reach 5 meters (16 ft). It can have 2–6 venomous spines on the tail, however, it does not pose a significant threat as it generally avoids human contact. A. narinari develops ovoviviparously—the eggs hatch internally and feed off a yolk sac until birth.

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (3)

I was Snokeling and saw 3 eagle rays it was really cool as ive never seen them so close only passing in the blue when diving!
Hey yes thanks for noticing that it was in Puerto Morelos i think i spelled it wrong on the map and so it logged it as somewhere crazy in the middle of Mexico!
Hi Moral, nice shot of the eagle ray. Is it possible that you did the spotting in the sea? (I think in the map the location may be wrong). Like all your UW pics :-)
Photographed
PublishedOctober 26, 2011

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