Maculabatis arabica Manjaji-Matsumoto & Last, 2016

Fernando, Daniel, Bown, Rosalind M. K., Tanna, Akshay, Gobiraj, Ramajeyam, Ralicki, Hannah, Jockusch, Elizabeth L., Ebert, David A., Jensen, Kirsten & Caira, Janine N., 2019, New insights into the identities of the elasmobranch fauna of Sri Lanka, Zootaxa 4585 (2), pp. 201-238 : 211-212

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4585.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8519C595-0A62-4710-8D38-B200951D7B19

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5945423

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/362D2832-DA30-3E57-0AC1-F92DFC67FE09

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Maculabatis arabica Manjaji-Matsumoto & Last
status

 

Maculabatis arabica Manjaji-Matsumoto & Last

( Figs. 2D View FIGURE 2 , 8 View FIGURE 8 C–E)

An immature specimen (SL-6) from the Pukulam landing site in the North Western Province was difficult to identify to species based on morphology alone. The rhombic disc and sparse white spots on the lateral margins of the tail immediately anterior to, adjacent to, and immediately posterior to the spine suggested it was a member of the genus Maculabatis Last, Naylor & Manjaji-Matsumoto. In the tree resulting from the Neighbor-Joining analysis, this specimen clustered with our reference specimen of Maculabatis arabica (MM-602; MK335258 View Materials ) from the Gulf of Oman. It differed from this specimen by only 1 bp, and is likely an immature individual of the species. Of note is that our specimen was somewhat inconsistent with the description of immatures of M. arabica presented by Manjaji-Matsumoto & Last (2016). Whereas they described the tail of immatures of M. arabica less than 33 cm in disc width (DW) to bear conspicuous white bands on the upper half of the tail behind the caudal sting, the tail of the specimen from Sri Lanka (DW of 17.6 cm) had inconspicuous white spots that were restricted to the region of the tail anterior and posterior to the tail spine. Examination of additional immature and adult specimens from Sri Lanka is required to confirm this identification.

To our knowledge, this is the first report of this species from Sri Lanka.

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