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- Diamond_stingray abstract "The diamond stingray (Dasyatis dipterura) is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae. It is found in the coastal waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean from southern California to northern Chile, and around the Galápagos and Hawaiian Islands. This bottom-dweller generally inhabits sandy or muddy flats near rocky reefs and kelp forests, to a depth of 30 m (98 ft), though off Hawaii it may range considerably deeper. As its common name suggests, this species has an angular, diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc that is plain brown or gray above, with rows of tubercles along the midline and on the "shoulders". The long, whip-like tail has both dorsal and ventral fin folds, which distinguish this ray from the closely similar longtail stingray (D. longa). It typically grows to 1 m (3.3 ft) across.When searching for food, diamond stingrays may form groups of up to hundreds of individuals. It is most active at night and preys mainly on burrowing invertebrates and small bony fishes, which are extracted from the bottom via suction or digging. This species is aplacental viviparous: once the embryos exhaust their yolk supply, they are nourished by histotroph ("uterine milk") produced by the mother. Females bear 1–4 pups every summer in estuaries; mating is followed by a ten-month period of either sperm storage or arrested embryonic development, after which the embryos rapidly mature over 2–3 months. The slowest-growing stingray known, this species is not resilient against fishing pressure. It is caught for food by artisanal fishers in Latin America, particularly in Mexico where it is one of the most economically important rays. This has led it to be assessed as Near Threatened in Mexico by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), while the species as a whole is listed as Data Deficient. Though innocuous towards humans, the diamond stingray's long, venomous tail spine is potentially dangerous.".
- Diamond_stingray binomialAuthority David_Starr_Jordan.
- Diamond_stingray class Chondrichthyes.
- Diamond_stingray class Elasmobranchii.
- Diamond_stingray conservationStatus "DD".
- Diamond_stingray conservationStatusSystem "IUCN3.1".
- Diamond_stingray family Whiptail_stingray.
- Diamond_stingray genus Dasyatis.
- Diamond_stingray kingdom Animal.
- Diamond_stingray order Myliobatiformes.
- Diamond_stingray phylum Chordate.
- Diamond_stingray synonym "Dasyatis hawaiensis (Jenkins, 1903)".
- Diamond_stingray synonym "Dasybatus dipterurus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1880)".
- Diamond_stingray synonym "Trygon brevis (Garman, 1880)".
- Diamond_stingray thumbnail Dasyatis_dipterura_galapagos_2.jpg?width=300.
- Diamond_stingray wikiPageExternalLink speciesSummary.php?ID=2573&genusname=Dasyatis&speciesname=dipterura&lang=English.
- Diamond_stingray wikiPageExternalLink search.php.
- Diamond_stingray wikiPageExternalLink www.iucnredlist.org.
- Diamond_stingray wikiPageExternalLink 0.
- Diamond_stingray wikiPageID "12598939".
- Diamond_stingray wikiPageRevisionID "551370012".
- Diamond_stingray binomial "Dasyatis dipterura".
- Diamond_stingray classis Chondrichthyes.
- Diamond_stingray colwidth "30".
- Diamond_stingray familia Whiptail_stingray.
- Diamond_stingray genus "Dasyatis".
- Diamond_stingray hasPhotoCollection Diamond_stingray.
- Diamond_stingray imageAlt "A dark brown ray swimming over a live-bottom habitat".
- Diamond_stingray ordo Myliobatiformes.
- Diamond_stingray phylum Chordate.
- Diamond_stingray rangeMap "Cypron-Range Dasyatis dipterura.svg".
- Diamond_stingray rangeMapAlt "World map with blue shading along the western coast of the Americas from Baja California to Peru, and around the Galapagos and Hawaiian Islands".
- Diamond_stingray rangeMapCaption "Range of the diamond stingray".
- Diamond_stingray regnum Animal.
- Diamond_stingray species "D. dipterura".
- Diamond_stingray status "DD".
- Diamond_stingray statusSystem "IUCN3.1".
- Diamond_stingray subclassis Elasmobranchii.
- Diamond_stingray synonyms "Dasyatis hawaiensis (Jenkins, 1903)".
- Diamond_stingray synonyms "Dasybatus dipterurus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1880)".
- Diamond_stingray synonyms "Trygon brevis (Garman, 1880)".
- Diamond_stingray subject Category:Animals_described_in_1880.
- Diamond_stingray subject Category:Dasyatis.
- Diamond_stingray subject Category:Fish_of_the_Gulf_of_California.
- Diamond_stingray subject Category:Galápagos_Islands_coastal_fauna.
- Diamond_stingray subject Category:Western_Central_American_coastal_fauna.
- Diamond_stingray subject Category:Western_North_American_coastal_fauna.
- Diamond_stingray type Animal100015388.
- Diamond_stingray type AnimalsDescribedIn1880.
- Diamond_stingray type LivingThing100004258.
- Diamond_stingray type Object100002684.
- Diamond_stingray type Organism100004475.
- Diamond_stingray type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Diamond_stingray type Whole100003553.
- Diamond_stingray type Animal.
- Diamond_stingray type Eukaryote.
- Diamond_stingray type Fish.
- Diamond_stingray type Species.
- Diamond_stingray type Fish.
- Diamond_stingray type Organism.
- Diamond_stingray comment "The diamond stingray (Dasyatis dipterura) is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae. It is found in the coastal waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean from southern California to northern Chile, and around the Galápagos and Hawaiian Islands. This bottom-dweller generally inhabits sandy or muddy flats near rocky reefs and kelp forests, to a depth of 30 m (98 ft), though off Hawaii it may range considerably deeper.".
- Diamond_stingray label "Dasyatis dipterura".
- Diamond_stingray label "Dasyatis dipterura".
- Diamond_stingray label "Dasyatis dipterura".
- Diamond_stingray label "Diamond stingray".
- Diamond_stingray sameAs Dasyatis_dipterura.
- Diamond_stingray sameAs Dasyatis_dipterura.
- Diamond_stingray sameAs Dasyatis_dipterura.
- Diamond_stingray sameAs m.02wx9jn.
- Diamond_stingray sameAs Q140127.
- Diamond_stingray sameAs Q140127.
- Diamond_stingray sameAs Diamond_stingray.
- Diamond_stingray wasDerivedFrom Diamond_stingray?oldid=551370012.
- Diamond_stingray depiction Dasyatis_dipterura_galapagos_2.jpg.
- Diamond_stingray isPrimaryTopicOf Diamond_stingray.