Abstract

Skates exhibit a variety of manifestations of sexual dimorphism. However, this phenomenon has been poorly documented in deepwater species. New data on the sexual dimorphism of five species of deepwater skates from the North Atlantic Ocean are presented:Amblyraja jenseni, Bathyraja pallida, Bathyraja richardsoni, Rajella bigelowi,andR. kukujevi. These skates exhibit sexual dimorphism most frequently in interorbital width, disc length and width, length of the third gill slit, horizontal diameter of the orbit, length of the fifth gill slit, space between the first and fifth gill slits, length of the second dorsal fin base, mouth width, length and width of each lobe of the nasal curtain, distance from the snout to the center of anus, distance from the snout tip to the point of maximum disc width, length of the lateral fold, length of the orbit + spiracle (measured together), tail height at the pelvic fin tips, and the number of median thorns.

Highlights

  • Skates (Rajoidei) comprise an important component of shelf and continental slope benthic communities of the world’s oceans

  • This study presents new data on sexually dimorphic morphological characters of five deepwater skate species from the North Atlantic Ocean: Jensen’s skate, Amblyraja jenseni [28]; pale ray, Bathyraja pallida [29]; Richardson’s ray, Bathyraja richardsoni [30]; Bigelow’s ray, Rajella bigelowi [31]; Mid-Atlantic skate, R. kukujevi [32]

  • Amblyraja jenseni was described in the middle of the past century [28] and since several records of this skate have been reported from the North Atlantic [43,44,45,46,47]

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Summary

Introduction

Skates (Rajoidei) comprise an important component of shelf and continental slope benthic communities of the world’s oceans.

Results
Conclusion
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