The longhorned pygmy devil ray Mobula eregoodoo (Cantor, 1849), formerly known as Mobula eregoodootenkee (Bleeker, 1859), is a small mobulid with a disc reaching a maximum width of 1.3 m, widely ranging in tropical and subtropical latitudes across the Indian Ocean, the Indo-Pacific region, and the western Pacific Ocean. A recently emerged opportunity to examine several (n = 47) M. eregoodoo specimens bycaught in bather protection gillnets off New South Wales, Australia, together with new information assembled from other areas of its range, now allows for a redescription of the species, which was incompletely described in the past because of a paucity of specimens. Based on the morphometric, morphological, ecological, and behavioural element...
New Australian records of the Japanese devilray Mobula japanica (Müller & Henle 1841) are documented...
The taxonomic history of the genus Manta has been questionable and convoluted, with Manta having one...
New Australian records of the Japanese devilray Mobula japanica (Müller & Henle 1841) are documented...
The Mobulidae are zooplanktivorous elasmobranchs comprising two recognized species of manta rays (Ma...
The spine tail devil ray Mobula japanica (Muller & Henle, 1841) is a large zooplanktivorous ray cir...
Manta and devil rays of the subfamily Mobulinae (mobulids) are rarely studied, large, pelagic elasmo...
The spine tail devil ray Mobula japanica (Muller & Henle, 1841) is a large zooplanktivorous ray cir...
This paper provides some of the only fisheries and quantitative biological data for the Mobulidae (m...
WOS:000457236000001International audienceManta and devil rays are filter-feeding elasmobranchs that ...
1265-1274Mobulidae are zooplanktivorous elasmobranchs, found circumglobally in tropical, subtropical...
The spinetail devilray Mobula japanica was recorded for the first time in the south-eastern Pacific ...
Manta and devil rays are filter-feeding elasmobranchs that are found circumglobally in tropical and ...
Manta and devil rays are filter-feeding elasmobranchs that are found circumglobally in tropical and ...
Not AvailableThe spine tail devil ray Mobula japanica (Muller & Henle, 1841) is a large zooplanktiv...
Mobulids have been poorly studied, but most are listed by the International Union for the Conservati...
New Australian records of the Japanese devilray Mobula japanica (Müller & Henle 1841) are documented...
The taxonomic history of the genus Manta has been questionable and convoluted, with Manta having one...
New Australian records of the Japanese devilray Mobula japanica (Müller & Henle 1841) are documented...
The Mobulidae are zooplanktivorous elasmobranchs comprising two recognized species of manta rays (Ma...
The spine tail devil ray Mobula japanica (Muller & Henle, 1841) is a large zooplanktivorous ray cir...
Manta and devil rays of the subfamily Mobulinae (mobulids) are rarely studied, large, pelagic elasmo...
The spine tail devil ray Mobula japanica (Muller & Henle, 1841) is a large zooplanktivorous ray cir...
This paper provides some of the only fisheries and quantitative biological data for the Mobulidae (m...
WOS:000457236000001International audienceManta and devil rays are filter-feeding elasmobranchs that ...
1265-1274Mobulidae are zooplanktivorous elasmobranchs, found circumglobally in tropical, subtropical...
The spinetail devilray Mobula japanica was recorded for the first time in the south-eastern Pacific ...
Manta and devil rays are filter-feeding elasmobranchs that are found circumglobally in tropical and ...
Manta and devil rays are filter-feeding elasmobranchs that are found circumglobally in tropical and ...
Not AvailableThe spine tail devil ray Mobula japanica (Muller & Henle, 1841) is a large zooplanktiv...
Mobulids have been poorly studied, but most are listed by the International Union for the Conservati...
New Australian records of the Japanese devilray Mobula japanica (Müller & Henle 1841) are documented...
The taxonomic history of the genus Manta has been questionable and convoluted, with Manta having one...
New Australian records of the Japanese devilray Mobula japanica (Müller & Henle 1841) are documented...