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- Batoid Wing Skeletal Structure: Novel Morphologies, Mechanical Implications, and Phylogenetic Patterns
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- Zootaxa, Urolophus Kapalensis Sp. Nov., a New
- Chapter 18 TOXINS from VENOMS and POISONS
- Project No. 2007/040
- Feeding Habits of Three Round Stingrays (Rajiformes: Urotrygonidae) in the Central Mexican Pacific
- AC 19 Summary Record
- Towards a System of Ecologically Representative Marine Protected
- Life History Strategies of Batoids
- On-The-Water Management Solutions to Halt the Decline and Support the Recovery of Australia's Endemic Elasmobranchs
- Four New Cestode Species from the Spiral Intestine of the Round Stingray, Urobatis Halleri, in the Northern Gulf of California, Mexico
- Tamuh72002.Pdf
- Diel Activity Patterns, Space Utilization, Seasonal Distribution And
- Description of Four New Stingarees of the Genus Urolophus (Batoidea: Urolophidae) from the Coral Sea, South-West Pacific
- Skeletal Anatomy, Phylogenetic Relationships, And
- Freshwater Stingrays of the Green
- DASYATIDAE Stingrays by J.D
- New Depth Record of the Thorny Stingray (Urotrygon Rogersi)
- Deep–Sea Cartilaginous Fishes of the Indian Ocean. Volume 2. Batoids and Chimaeras
- V10F-Endemics.Pdf
- Distributions and Habitats: Urolophidae
- A Fish with Letters
- Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) from Italy Defines a New, Basal Body Plan in Pelagic Stingrays Giuseppe Marramà1* , Giorgio Carnevale2, Gavin J
- The Devil in the Deep: Expanding the Known Habitat of a Rare and Protected Fish
- 5 Skates and Rays
- LIFE HISTORY ASPECTS and POPULATION DYNAMICS of a COMMERCIALLY EXPLOITED STINGRAY, Dasyatis Dipterura
- Baywide Monitoring of Key Fishery Species in Seagrass Beds Sub‐Program
- Age and Growth Parameters of the Panamic Stingray (Urotrygon
- By College of University for the Degree of Major Subject
- Stingrays Can They Be Handled? PETER SYMES
- NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-NWFSC-110. Atlantis Model
- A Comparative Analysis of Feeding and Trophic Level Ecology in Stingrays (Rajiformes; Myliobatoidei) and Electric Rays (Rajiformes: Torpedinoidei)
- Myliobatiformes: Urolophidae) from the Eastern Pacific
- Pelvic Girdle Shape Predicts Locomotion and Phylogeny in Batoids
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