Izu stingray
The Izu stingray is a little-known species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae, endemic to the Izu Peninsula of Japan. Found in shallow coastal waters, it is a fairly small species with a smooth, golden-brown, diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc and a whip-like tail with a low keel above and fin fold beneath. The fin fold is white, distinguishing the Izu stingray from all other Pacific members of its family.
Taxonomy
The Izu stingray was described by Kiyonori Nishida and Kazuhiro Nakaya in a 1988 issue of the Japanese Journal of Ichthyology. Its specific epithet izuensis refers to where the type specimen, a wide adult male, was caught.Distribution and habitat
The Izu stingray occurs only off the Izu Peninsula on the eastern coast of the Japanese main island Honshū. This bottom-dwelling species inhabits waters close to shore, at depths of.Description
The largest Izu stingray on record measures across. The pectoral fin disc is diamond-shaped, slightly wider than long, with gently convex forward margins and a blunt snout. The eyes are medium-sized and followed by large spiracles. A flap of skin with a fringed trailing margin is present between the nares. There are 35-41 tooth rows in the upper jaw and 37-39 tooth rows in the lower jaw; the teeth have a pavement-like quincunx arrangement and are blunt in females and juveniles but somewhat pointed in mature males. A transverse row of 5 papillae, with the 2 outermost slimmer than the others, is found on the floor of the mouth.The pelvic fins are broad and triangular. The tail is whip-like, about as long as the disc, and bears 1 stinging spines on top. The spine has a short groove and typically measures long in males and in females, with 112 and 130 serrations respectively. Following the spine, there is a short and slight dorsal keel and a ventral fin fold. The skin is completely smooth, other than 2-6 small tubercles located before the spine in the largest individuals. The coloration is golden brown above, darkening between the eyes and on the last two-thirds of the tail, and white below, darkening towards the fin margins. Unlike all other stingrays in the Pacific, the ventral tail fold is white rather than dark.