Rays, the Gristly ones

Blue-spotted Fantail Ray, Taeniura lymna

Manta Ray looping

Similarly to sharks, rays do not have a true bony skeleton like most fish but instead have a cartilaginous skeleton made of the same material as our nose and ears. Unlike sharks though rays are flattened and spend most of their time lying on the bottom or swimming close to it. They have gill slits and their mouth on the underside. Openings on their dorsal surface called spiracles allow them to respire when they are in this prone position. Manta rays (Manta birostris) are the largest of all the rays. In Ningaloo they have a wingspan of approximately 3 metres, the oceanic species reportedly get twice as big as this. Manta rays do not have a venomous spine like some other rays. They feed on planktonic organisms in the water the same as whalesharks. Their feeding behaviour involves them curling their cephalic lobes (which are the side tendrils on the anterior part of the body) and this funnels the water into their mouth. They make a swooping motion in the water called a barrel roll over and over again when straining the food from the water.

Manta Ray looping

Rays vary in shapes and sizes. Eagle rays have a similar shape to the manta ray with a pronounced head but they have a venomous barb on their tail. Fiddler rays and shovelnose rays have retained a shark like shape by having a caudal tail fin longitudinally shaped body and upright dorsal fins and no tail barb. The stingrays and stingarees have a disc shaped body and long whip like tails with a barb. Most of these rays feed on crustaceans and molluscs in the sand and conveniently there mouth is located on the underside of the body. They also have horny plates in their mouth instead of true teeth and these crush their food up.

Manta Ray looping

Some rays such as the bluespotted stingray which is found locally at Ningaloo reef have bright warning colours. Most rays rely on their flattened bodies and partially bury themselves in sand to hide and rest from predators. One particularly interesting behaviour that was recently discovered (by a postgraduate student from Simon Fraser University studying rays in Shark Bay, Western Australia) is that rays will rest in groups in shallow water with their heads facing each other and their tails and barbs pointing outwards to defend themselves from approaching predators.

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