Group Since Jul 19, 2008
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Title | Author | Replies | Last Replier | Latest Post |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eagle Rays | bodiver | 1 | shadowshador | 15 years ago |
Group Description
this group is all about the surreal, graceful-ness (if thats a word) of the manta and stingrays. To me, they are too cool. <3 rays!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
xtrah mAnTa InFo~
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The Manta Ray (Manta birostris) is closely related to sharks. Like the shark their skeleton is made of cartilage. On average they are about 20 feet wide and weigh up to 3000 pounds. They are the largest of the rays. They are dark brown or black above and white underneath. Two flap-like lobes extending from their eyes are used to funnel microscopic plankton into their mouths. They also eat small fish and crustaceans. They have no teeth.
The word manta is Spanish meaning blanket, which is a word that describes the appearance of these animals very well.
Mantas are distributed worldwide and generally inhabit tropical seas. They are graceful swimmers using their fins to propel them through the water. They are also known to leap clear out of the water. They have few natural predators, such as the shark or killer whale.
Females give birth to one or two pups. They are about 45 inches long at birth and weigh 20 pounds. The young grow quickly.
Manta Rays are harmless to divers. Some Rays have stinging tails.
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xtrah StInGrAy InFo~
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Stingrays (Dasyatidae) use their greatly enlarged pectoral fins to excavate the bottom, searching for shellfish that they crush with broad, flat teeth. It is common to find these rays buried in sand or mud. If an unwary wader steps on this ray, they could be stung by the poisonous tail spine. The pain from the sting is excruciating.
These rays are anywhere from 1 to 7 feet long. They generally inhabit warm, shallow seas.
The Diamond stingray (Dasyatis brevis) is 6 feet long and 4 feet wide. The sting from this ray is extremely serious and there is at least one death recorded. These rays like to bury themselves in the sand and can become nearly invisible. Their range is off the coast of British Columbia all the way south to Peru. They are common along the coast of San Diego, California, and also in the Gulf of California.
The large, wide butterfly rays, often considered part of this group, are not as dangerous.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rules of the game~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
and there you have it. sorry if it was too much or too little. okay, so, just one more thing to say..
rules of the game: 1.i left posting open. that means you can post whatever as much or little as you like. post pictures AND videos about manta rays and stingrays ONLY. please. no pictures of, like, trees or something in here just to be funny. I WILL DELETE THEM. just so you know.
2. I really think that its kindof stupid that flickr is letting post videos, but it is the way it is, id personally rather it be a photo website and stay a photo website till the end, but whatevs. I guess its cool to have a FEW videos about mantas and stings. So go ahead and post videos, just not to many. limit yourself to one or two. k?
thats it. thnx for being patient with my long info, i know its a lot. and have fun on the group!!!!!!
Additional Info
- This group will count toward the photo’s limit (60 for Pro members, 30 for free members)
- Accepted media types: Photos, Videos
- Accepted content types: Photos, Art, Screenshots, Virtual Photography
- Accepted safety levels: Safe