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Some species of stingrays are endangered due to pollution and overfishing. Some species of stingray that are endangered are the Ganges Stingray, Giant Freshwater Stingray, Izu Stingray, and the Marbled Freshwater Stingray.
'Stingrays' are a suborder of cartilaginous fish containing many families of different species. Most stingay species are widespread enough that they are not considered threatened species. But some, such as the Blotched Fantail Ray are considered endangered or vulnerable.
There are five species of stingray that are currently listed with the status of "endangered" , according to the IUCN Red List. There are many other species listed from "data deficient" to "vulnerable". The "endangered" species are the * Ganges Stingray * Marbled Whipray * Mekong Freshwater Stingray * White-Edge Freshwater Stingray * Thorny Freshwater Stingray For more details, please see sites listed below.
Stingrays are not endangered.
A Stingray or family of the stingray species
There are many different species that are endangered in Florida. 8 species of ammphibians endangered 1 species of arachnids endangered 23 species of birds endangered 11 species of clams endangered 8 species of coralsm jellyfish and sea anemones endangered 25 species of crustaceans endangered 33 species of fishes endangered 18 species of insects endangered 15 species of mammals endangered 53 species of plants endangered 9 species of reptiles endangered 13 species of snails endangered
pagi
figm jigm
about 70
No, a stingray does not mate for life. The time they mate will vary based on where the Stingray is located and the species of the Stingray.
No, it is not an endangered species
overhunted and many predators