Fig. 264.—Raia murrayi, from Kerguelen Island. A, male; B, female. (From Günther.)

The great majority of the species belong to the genus Raia (Fig. 264), which chiefly inhabits temperate seas, but is more abundant in the northern than in the southern hemisphere, and approaches nearer to the Arctic and Antarctic regions than any other Batoidei. The colour of the upper surface of the body is closely assimilated to that of the sandy or gravelly bottom on which they live, and thus concealed, small Fishes, Crustaceans, and other organisms are lured unsuspectingly within the reach of the comparatively inactive and sluggish Ray. From the ventral position of the mouth the Ray cannot at once seize its prey, but the Fish darts over its victim and covers it with its body, and then readily devours it. The sexes are usually distinguished by secondary sexual characters, which take the form of differences in size and coloration, in the dentition, and also in the presence and position of patches or rows of specially modified dermal spines on the dorsal surface (Fig. 264). Some of the larger species reach a great size, the disc measuring 7 to 8 feet in width. A few species range into deep water. R. mamillidens, a uniformly jet-black species, has been obtained from a depth of 597 fathoms in the Bay of Bengal,[[543]] and R. abyssicola from 1588 fathoms off Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia.[[544]] The following are British species: the Thornback (R. clavata); the Spotted Ray (R. maculata); the Painted Ray (R. microcellata); the Starry Ray (R. radiata); the Cuckoo or Sandy Ray (R. circularis); the Skate (R. batis); the Flapper Skate (R. macrorhynchus); the White Skate (R. alba); the Long-nosed Skate (R. oxyrhynchus); and the Shagreen Ray (R. fullonica).[[545]] Most of the species are of some economic value as food Fishes. Psammobatis, with a circular disc, frequents the southern coasts of South America, and Platyrhina the coasts of India, China, and Japan.

The family ranges from the Upper Cretaceous, in which, as well as in different Tertiary deposits, it is represented by species of Raia. An extinct genus, Cyclobatis, with a circular or oval disc, occurs in the Upper Cretaceous of Mount Lebanon.

Fam. 4. Tamiobatidae.—The systematic position of the only representative of this family, Tamiobatis vetustus,[[546]] from the Devonian or Lower Carboniferous of Kentucky, is very uncertain, but in some respects this unique type seems to be intermediate between the modern Sharks and the Rays.

Fam. 5. Torpedinidae (Electric Rays).—A disc is formed as in the Raiidae, but it is sub-circular in shape rather than rhombic, and in the nature of its endoskeletal supports it is in some respects unique. Its semicircular anterior margin is supported in the centre by a branched prenasal rostrum, and laterally by the curiously branched preorbital cartilages, each of which radiates outwards and forwards from a common basal articulation with the lateral ethmoid regions of the skull. Tail relatively short and thick, with two dorsal fins, a caudal fin, and two lateral longitudinal folds. Skin smooth, without denticles. Mouth transverse and ventral. A characteristic quadrangular naso-frontal lobe, with a free hinder margin, which forms the anterior lip, is enclosed by the two nasal organs and the oro-nasal grooves leading from them to the corresponding angles of the mouth. A pair of large electric organs between the pectoral fins and the head. Seven genera and about fifteen species. Inhabitants of most warm seas.

Fig. 265.—The Electric Ray (Torpedo ocellata). Dorsal (A) and ventral (B) views. p.f, Pectoral fin; pv.f, pelvic fin; sp, spiracle.

The well-known genus Torpedo (Fig. 265) is represented by species in the Mediterranean (T. marmorata, T. narce, T. hebetans), the Red Sea, and the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. T. hebetans has been taken at several places in British waters. An American Torpedo (Tetronarce) is represented by species on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. Narcine is a very widely distributed genus, species having been recorded from the East Indies, Tasmania, China, Japan, South Africa, and the Atlantic coasts of North and South America. Discopyge is an eastern Pacific genus (Peru and Panama). Hypnos frequents the Australian seas.

The family seems to be exclusively Tertiary, and its earliest fossil representatives are from the Upper Eocene of Monte Bolca.

Fam. 6. Trygonidae (Sting- or Whip-tailed Rays).—Disc sub-rhombic, broader than long. Pectoral fins confluent with the sides of the head, their preaxial endoskeletal radialia meeting in front of the skull along the lateral margins of a slender prenasal rostral cartilage. Tail usually whip-like, terminating in a small caudal fin, and generally armed with a sharp, serrated spine, which takes the place of a dorsal fin. Skin smooth or spinose. A rectangular naso-frontal flap in front of the mouth. About ten genera and fifty species. Found in nearly all tropical and subtropical seas.