Tetronarce
Tetronarce is a genus of ray fish, commonly known as electric rays. They are slow-moving bottom-dwellers capable of generating electricity as a defense and feeding mechanism. Tetronarce species tend to attain a much larger size of up to 180 cm TL than Torpedo electric rays species, which usually range from 25 to 80 cm TL.
Species
There are nine recognized species in this genus:| Image | Name | Common name | Distribution |
| Tetronarce californica Ayres, 1855 | Pacific electric ray | northeastern Pacific Ocean from Baja California to British Columbia. | |
| Tetronarce cowleyi Ebert, D. L. Haas & M. R. de Carvalho, 2015 | Cowley's torpedo ray | around southern Africa, from Walvis Bay, Namibia to Algoa Bay, Eastern Cape, South Africa | |
| Tetronarce fairchildi F. W. Hutton, 1872 | New Zealand torpedo | New Zealand | |
| Tetronarce formosa D. L. Haas & Ebert, 2006 | Taiwan torpedo | Northwest Pacific: Taiwan. | |
| Tetronarce macneilli Whitley, 1932 | Shorttail torpedo | southern Australia from Port Hedland to the Swain Reefs | |
| Tetronarce nobiliana Bonaparte, 1835 | Atlantic torpedo | Atlantic Ocean, from Nova Scotia to Brazil in the west and from Scotland to West Africa and off southern Africa in the east | |
| Tetronarce puelcha Lahille, 1926 | Argentine torpedo | Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay. | |
| Tetronarce tokionis S. Tanaka (I), 1908 | Trapezoid torpedo | Japan and Taiwan. | |
| Tetronarce tremens F. de Buen, 1959 | Chilean torpedo | Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Peru. |