Sphyrna laevissima (Cope, 1867)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26879/1233 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DEA321-FFA2-FF8A-9BC4-FB54AD3FE36D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Sphyrna laevissima (Cope, 1867) |
status |
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Sphyrna laevissima (Cope, 1867)
Tooth type: Cutting-clutching.
In light of tooth morphology, the recent species that is closest to S. laevissima is S. zygaena (Linnaeus, 1758) . Because of such similarity, Purdy et al. (2001) placed S. laevissima in synonymy with S. zygaena , but Reinecke et al. (2011) demonstrated that these two taxa are indeed different. Sphyrna zyganea feeds mainly on cephalopods, followed by bony fishes, and has a TL of 4.2 (Cortés, 1999). It lives on coastal to offshore waters, from the surface to 200 m deep, possibly also down to 500 m deep (Ebert et al., 2021).
ORDER INCERTAE SEDIS
Family Megascyliorhinidae Pfeil, 1984
Genus Megascyliorhinus Cappetta and Ward 1977
Megascyliorhinus miocaenicus (Antunes and Jonet, 1970)
Tooth type: Clutching.
The genus as well as the family are extinct. A discussion about this species can be found in Manganelli and Spadini (2019). The teeth show odontological analogies to the Scyliorhinidae . See Pachyscyllium dachiardii above for details.
ORDER RAJIFORMES Berg, 1940
Family Rhinidae Müller and Henle, 1841
Genus Rhynchobatus Müller and Henle, 1837
Rhynchobatus pristinus (Probst, 1877)
Tooth type: Crushing.
All eight extant species of Rhynchobatus live in shallow water down to 70 m depth and they all feature bony fishes and invertebrates in their diet (Froese and Pauly, 2019). Apart from one species with a TL of 4.5, all the others range from 3.4 to 3.6 in TL (Froese and Pauly, 2019).
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