they are classified as fish and are derived from sharks
Yes. Stingrays have a backbone, so they are classified as vertebrates. All fish, including the cartilaginous fish such as rays and sharks, are vertebrates.
The exact population of short tailed stingrays is not known. However, their numbers are high enough that they are not classified as threatened or even near threaten, so the short tail has been classified as "Least Concern" by the World Conservation Union.
Stingrays are consumers, specifically classified as carnivores. They primarily feed on small fish, crustaceans, and mollusks, using their flat bodies and specialized hunting techniques to capture prey. Unlike producers, which create energy through photosynthesis, or decomposers, which break down organic matter, stingrays rely on other organisms for their nutritional needs.
The collective noun for 'stingrays' is a fever of stingrays.
...everything.
Crabs are scavengers; they will eat stingrays if the stingrays are already dead.
stingrays do not bite they have a stinger in the tale
Stingrays belong to the phylum Chordata, which includes all animals with a notochord (flexible rod-like structure) at some stage in their development. They are specifically classified in the class Chondrichthyes, which includes cartilaginous fish like sharks and rays.
No,stingrays are NOT vertebrates.They have cartilage,not bones.
stingrays that aren't poisnous
Are there stingrays in Louisiana? In the gulf of Mexico
Stingrays are a group of rays, which are cartilaginous fishes related to sharks. They are classified in the suborder Myliobatoidei of the order Myliobatiformes and consist of eight families: Hexatrygonidae , Plesiobatidae , Urolophidae, Urotrygonidae, Dasyatidae, Potamotrygonidae, Gymnuridae, and Myliobatidae.