A revised classification of the family Dasyatidae (Chondrichthyes: Myliobatiformes) based on new morphological and molecular insights
Author
Last, Peter R.
Author
Naylor, Gavin J. P.
Author
Manjaji-Matsumoto, B. Mabel
text
Zootaxa
2016
4139
3
345
368
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4139.3.2
51358935-98b0-4d89-a47f-e4341171e5b9
1175-5326
262765
DCF4220B-4A73-407C-837C-54DEAE29F435
Genus
Megatrygon
gen. nov.
Type
species
Trygon microps
Annandale, 1908:393
; newly proposed, monotypic.
Definition
. Very large dasyatid (adults to
220 cm
DW) characterised by the following: very robust, broad rhombic disc with pectoral-fin apex angular; snout broadly angular (~3 times combined orbit and spiracle length); eye very small and sunken; nasal curtain skirt shaped; mouth narrow, with 5 oral papillae; tail short (length subequal to DW), very broad-based and depressed anteriorly, very strongly tapered at caudal sting then becoming filamentous; pelvic fins large, protruding greatly beyond disc; dorsal fold forming a low ridge; ventral fold low with a very short base; caudal sting posterior on tail (distance from pectoral-fin insertion to caudal-sting base more than 3 times interspiracular width); skin densely covered with minute stellate denticles but denticle band absent; no median rows of thorns and scapular thorns absent; tail base and sides covered with thorny denticles; dorsal colour plain; ventral surface white, disc margin dark; tail plain, black distally; marine, Indo–
West
Pacific.
Etymology
. Combination of the Greek
mégas
(great, large, mighty) and Greek
trygon
(stingray) with reference to the massive bulk of this gigantic stingray.
Species
.
M. microps
(Annandale, 1908)
.
Remarks
. Newly erected, monotypic genus and formerly assigned to
Dasyatis
. The placement of
Megatrygon microps
in the family
Dasyatidae
is provisional as molecular data (see also Naylor
et al
., in press) suggest that it, along with the ‘amphi-American
Himantura
’, are more closely related to the freshwater Neotropical stingrays (
Potamotrygonidae
) of
South
America. Further investigations are needed to determine the position of this species in the order
Myliobatiformes
, but it may belong in its own family.