Arctic skate

Species of fish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arctic skate

The Arctic skate (Amblyraja hyperborea) is a species of fish in the family Rajidae. It lives near the seabed between 140 and 2,500 m deep in the Arctic Ocean and waters around Canada and northern and north-western Europe, in the northern Pacific Ocean, and in waters surrounding Antarctica and New Zealand.[2]

Quick Facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
Arctic skate
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Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Order: Rajiformes
Family: Rajidae
Genus: Amblyraja
Species:
A. hyperborea
Binomial name
Amblyraja hyperborea
(Collett, 1879)
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The Arctic skate is about 1 m long and is gray-brown with large dark spots. Its underside is white with dark patterns. It has thorns in line from back to near the end of its tail. It is oviparous; its eggs are capsules with hard horns on each corner. It eats all sorts of small animals at the bottom of the sea.[2]

Taxonomy

This species was first described by Robert Collett in 1879 and named Raja hyperborea.[3]

Conservation

The Arctic skate is classified as being of "least concern" by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.[1]

In New Zealand, the Department of Conservation has classified the Arctic skate as "Not Threatened" under the New Zealand Threat Classification System.[4]

References

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