its barb
The barb around its tail is its protection. If a predator tries to prey on the stingray, the stingray will whip its tail and the barb injects a venom into the predator. Contact with the stinger causes local trauma (from the cut itself), pain, swelling, muscle cramps from the venom, and later possibly even infection from bacteria.
The "Stingray" moniker was not used in 1981.
A stingray's body structure includes a flat shape and a venomous stinger on their tail, which they use for self-defense against potential predators. Their body is also covered in hardened scales or dermal denticles, providing an additional layer of protection.
To warn of plankton and sharks
"StingRay" (one word) emblems first appeared on the 1963. "Sting Ray" (two words) first appeared on the 1968 model. You have it backwards. The two word Sting Ray was used from 1963 to 1967. 1968 did not use the Stingray name. In 1969 the Stingray badge came back as one word, "STINGRAY."
A Stingray.
Stingray - 1964 Stingray 1-1 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
With a dead stingray
Gills on the underbelly of the stingray.
a stingray is a consumer.
stingray
The tail is called a barb. It has poison that can be deadly.