First photographic records of the giant manta ray Manta birostris off eastern Australia. 3 1397-2068 pp.Ĭouturier LIE, Jaine FRA, Kashiwagi T. FAO Species Identification Guide for Fisheries Purposes. The Living Marine Resources of the Western Central Pacific. Families Gymnuridae, Myliobatidae, Rhinopteridae, Mobulidae. John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.Ĭompagno, L.J.V. ![]() ![]() Hamlett (ed.) Sharks, Skates, and Rays: the Biology of Elasmobranch Fishes. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 35: 649-657.Ĭompagno, L.J.V. Natural history notes on the devil-fish, Manta birostris (Walbaum) and Mobula olfersi (Müller). Masters thesis, Texas A&M University.Ĭoles, R.J. (2002) Population structure of Manta birostris from the Pacific Islands and Atlantic Oceans. Manta birostris, predator of the deep? Insight into the diet of the giant manta ray through stable isotope analysis R. Sea Technology 25(11): 71.īurgess KB, Couturier LIE, Marshall AD, Richardson AR, Weeks SJ, Bennett MR. Manta ray wings, shark meat posing as scallops. Zoological Journal London 4: 444-457īooda, L. On the fish known in Jamaica as the sea devil ( Cephalopholis manta). Christmas Island : Christmas Island Natural History Association 2, 284 pp.īancroft, E.N. Perth : Western Australian Museum 292 pp. Marine Fishes of Tropical Australia and South-east Asia. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 118: 151-164.Īllen, G.R. Evidence of brain-warming in the mobulid rays, Mobula tarapacana and Manta birostris (Chondrichthyes: Elasmobranchii: Batoidea: Myliobatiformes). Mobula birostris (Walbaum 1792) ReferencesĪlexander, R.L. The specific name birostris refers to the two horn-like cephalic lobes: bi- (= two) and rostrum (= snout).
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