Rhinidae, J.P.Muller & Henle, 1841

Elasmobranch, Its Implications For Global, Parasitology, Diversity And, Naylor, G. J. P., Sc, Caira, J. N., Ct, Jensen, K., Ks, Rosana, K. A. M., Fl, White, W. T., Csiro, Tas, Last, P. R., Csiro & Tas, 2012, A Dna Sequence-Based Approach To The Identification Of Shark And Ray Species And Its Implications For Global Elasmobranch Diversity And Parasitology, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2012 (367), pp. 1-262 : 90

publication ID

0003-0090

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BC76865D-127A-5769-FF76-FA37FBA2572D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Rhinidae
status

 

Rhinidae View in CoL View at ENA (sharkrays)

Rhina ancylostoma (sharkray) ( fig. 69)

The six specimens included here came from northern Australia and northern Borneo and thus represent only a small portion of the distributionofthiswidespreadIndo-WestPacific species. They were found to comprise a single cluster, which grouped along with but outside the specimens of Rhynchobatus . The range of

pairwise differences among specimens in this

cluster was 0–4, with an average of 2.1.

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