Scientific name: Dasyatis laosensis,
French name: Raie dulcicole du Mékong,
English name: Mekong freshwater stingray
Scientific name: Dasyatis laosensisRussian name: Пресноводный скат меконгскийEnglish name: Mekong freshwater stingray
Scientific name: Dasyatis imbricatus,Russian name: Скат черепитчатый,English name: Imbricated sting ray
Ichthyophis laosensis was created in 1969.
Dasyatis say
Its the scientific name for the Stingray
Dasyatis americana.
Dasyatis acutirostra was created in 1988.
Dasyatis pastinaca
Superregnum: EukaryotaRegnum: AnimaliaSubregnum: EumetazoaSuperphylum: DeuterostomiaPhylum: ChordataSubphylum: VertebrataInfraphylum: GnathostomataClassis: ChondrichthyesSubclassis: ElasmobranchiiSuperordo: RajomorphiiOrdo: RajiformesSuperfamilia: DasyatoideaFamilia: DasyatidaeGenera: Dasyatis - Himantura - Makararaja - Pastinachus - Pteroplatytrygon - Taeniura - Urogymnus And what does all of this mean? Every living thing is classified by a binomial naming system that has seven level: Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species (and certain sub and supra levels as needed) . What we have up here is the binomial path that leads down to the Stingrays. To name a particular stingray you now have to decide which Genus it is that you want and then get yourself a list of species that belong to the Genus. To get the name of a particular species you have to have a Genus and species.
Yes, the blue stingray (Dasyatis Chrysonota) is very good with being handled by humans.
stingrays can be found in grand cayman at stingray city near the barrier reefyour question is a little vague. The stingrays are a family of fish-Dasyatidae-of rays, cartilaginous fishes related to sharks. therefore different stingrays live in different parts of the world; HoweverThey are common in coastal tropical and subtropical marine waters throughout the world, but the family also includes species found in warmer temperate oceans such as Dasyatis thetidis, and species entirely restricted to fresh water such as D. laosensis and Himantura chaophraya. With the exception of Pteroplatytrygon violacea.
No, it isn't a French name.