Despite their near ubiquity — they’re found in every ocean except the Arctic and Antarctic — stingrays remain enigmatic creatures. In fact, it was only recently discovered that one type of stingray, the cownose ray, appears to use its distinctive tail as an antenna to sense danger. That information comes to us from a 2025 paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society by Júlia Chaumel and George V. Lauder, who write that the tails are “able to detect water disturbances resulting from prey, predators, body movements, and near body flow dynamics.”
Their skeleton is made up entirely of fibrous cartilage. They’re sometimes referred to as cartilaginous fish, as are sharks.
For most types of stingrays, it has long been known that their tails are used to defend against would-be predators such as sharks. But in the Myliobatiformes order, which includes manta rays, devil rays, and cownose rays, the purpose of the tail was not previously clear. The study focused on cownose rays, whose tails are made up of stiff tissue covered in small holes; 3D scans revealed these holes are connected to the lateral line canal, a series of sensory organs that extend the length of the ray’s body, including receptors in its skin that detect movement. That’s especially useful for cownose rays, which bury their heads in the sand to feed on burrowing bivalves. Lacking eyes in the back of their heads, they rely on their antennae-like tails to warn them of incoming predators before it’s too late.
Though they look nearly identical to the untrained eye, rays and skates have a key distinction: Skates are oviparous and rays are ovoviviparous, meaning skates lay eggs and rays give birth to live babies.
Female stingrays typically give birth once a year to around two to 13 babies at a time, depending on the species. The infants, known as pups, are quite developed (and, it must be said, cute) at the time of their birth. Rays are also larger and have spines, whereas skates are characterized by their fleshy tails and lack of spines.
Michael Nordine
Staff Writer
Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.
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