- "Batoids:
Order Rajiformes".
ReefQuest Centre for
Shark Research.
Retrieved 2013-09-01.
Vanden Berghe,
Edward (2013). "
Rajiformes". WoRMS.
World Register...
- Alternatively, the name "skate" is used to
refer to the
entire order of
Rajiformes (families Anacanthobatidae, Arhynchobatidae,
Gurgesiellidae and Rajidae)...
-
Sclerorhynchoidea are
basal or
incertae sedis; they show
features of the
Rajiformes but have
snouts resembling those of sawfishes. However,
evidence indicates...
-
Extinct in the wild (EW): 6
species Critically endangered (CR): 455
species Endangered (EN): 643
species Vulnerable (VU): 1,245
species Near...
- (2016). "Changes to the
nomenclature of the
skates (Chondrichthyes:
Rajiformes)". Rays of the World:
Supplementary information.
CSIRO Australian National...
- was 9 tonnes. The
family of
Rajiformes include ten
families of ray-like
fishes such as
skates and stingrays. Of the
Rajiformes,
three species are common...
-
Order Hexanchiformes Superorder Batoidea Order Myliobatiformes Order Rajiformes Order Rhinopristiformes Order Torpediniformes Subclass Holocephali Superorder...
-
cartilaginous fishes related to sharks. They were
formerly included in the
order Rajiformes, but more
recent phylogenetic studies have
shown the
myliobatiforms to...
- The
largest prehistoric animals include both
vertebrate and
invertebrate species. Many of them are
described below,
along with
their typical range of size...
-
sawsharks (order Pristiophoriformes) or the
extinct sclerorhynchoids (order
Rajiformes)
which have a
similar appearance, or
swordfish (family Xiphiidae) which...