Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Common guitarfish

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Rhinobatidae

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Rajiformes

Genus
  
Common guitarfish Common guitarfish photo Rhinobatos rhinobatos G41322 ARKive

Similar
  
Blackchin guitarfish, Rhinobatos, Guitarfish, Smoothback angelshark, Spiny butterfly ray

The common guitarfish (Rhinobatos rhinobatos) is a species of cartilaginous fish in the family Rhinobatidae. It is native to the eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. It is a bottom-dwelling fish feeding on crustaceans, other invertebrates and fish. The females give birth to live young. Its lifestyle makes it vulnerable to trawling and other fishing methods, populations seem to be declining and it has disappeared from parts of its range. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed its conservation status as being "endangered".

Contents

Common guitarfish Common guitarfish photo Rhinobatos rhinobatos G41321 ARKive

Description

Common guitarfish Image Rhinobatos rhinobatos Common Guitarfish BioLibcz

The common guitarfish can grow to a length of about 147 cm (58 in), but a more normal length is about 80 cm (30 in). The dorsal surface is khaki-brown and the underparts are white. It is very similar in appearance to the blackchin guitarfish (Rhinobatos cemiculus), which shares its distribution, but is generally smaller, has larger eyes, more widely separated rostral ridges, a longer front nasal lobe and a wider back nasal flap.

Distribution

Common guitarfish Guitarfish Going Under Irregular Times

The common guitarfish is found in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Its range extends from the southern end of the Bay of Biscay to Angola, including the Mediterranean Sea. It cruises slowly around just above the seabed, sometimes resting on the sand or mud and semi-covering itself with sediment.

Ecology

Common guitarfish cdn2arkiveorgmediaD1D1B5ED1073F94294AC7CC

The common guitarfish is a benthic fish, cruising along just above the sandy or muddy seabed and foraging for crustaceans, other invertebrates and fish. It is an ovoviviparous fish with one or two litters of live young being born each year, each litter being four to ten fish. The gestation period is about four months, and the young develop inside the female, obtaining nourishment from their yolk sacs at first, and later from uterine secretions of their mother.

Status

The common guitarfish lives close to the coast and breeds in shallow water. This makes it vulnerable, and it is fished, primarily as bycatch, over much of its range. In the northern Mediterranean, catches used to be landed, along with the blackchin guitarfish (Rhinobatos cemiculus), at fishing ports such as Palermo, but both fish are now no longer seen there and have probably been extirpated from the area. It is no longer to be seen in the Balearic Islands either. Off the coasts of West Africa, it is caught as bycatch by international shrimp trawling vessels, and by cephalopod fisheries trawling the seabed, as well as being caught by local artisanal gill net fishermen. Its meat may be salted and exported and its fins sold to Asia. It may be safest in the southern Mediterranean where the fishing is less intensive and it is still sometimes landed, but even there, most of the fish landed are immature. For the fish to have a long-term future and the fisheries to be sustainable, the adult fish need to be allowed to mature and breed. There is no special conservation plan for this fish and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed its conservation status as being "endangered".

References

Common guitarfish Wikipedia


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