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Biologist discovers new stingray genus

A biologist from the University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC) has discovered a new kind of tropical freshwater stingray.

Nathan Lovejoy, an associate professor of ecology and at UTSC, is co-author on a new study detailing the discovery of a new genus and two new of stingrays found in the upper Amazon.

Lovejoy鈥檚 10 years of research with his collaborator, Marcelo Rodrigues de Carvalho of the University of Sao Paolo, confirmed the first new genus of stingrays from the Amazon region in more than two decades.

鈥淚t took a considerable amount of time to collect enough specimens to describe the species,鈥 says Lovejoy, who sometimes had to compete with international fish exporters for the bigger examples. 鈥淭hey are uncommon fishes and therefore difficult to obtain.鈥

Their work in the Upper Amazon confirmed the new genus, Heliotrygon, and the two new species, Heliotrygon gomesi and Heliotrygon rosai. Both are known for their large size, pancake-like appearance, having a distinct pattern of lateral line canals on the ventral surface and a degenerate spine.

Most of Lovejoy and Carvalho鈥檚 specimens came from the Rio Nanay River, near Iquitos, Peru. Their discovery brings the total number of Neotropical stingray genera to four. Before their study, the last new of stingrays of Amazon was described in 1987.

鈥淭he most important thing this discovery tells us is that there are quite likely to be other large fishes in the yet to be discovered and described,鈥 says Lovejoy. 鈥淥ur understanding of the biodiversity of this region is not complete, by any stretch of the imagination.鈥

Lovejoy鈥檚 paper was recently published in the scientific journal Zootaxa.

Provided by University of Toronto

Citation: Biologist discovers new stingray genus (2011, March 3) retrieved 21 May 2025 from /news/2011-03-biologist-stingray-genus.html
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