deeper than you have you not whatched any history channels that should tell you and you should have asked your parents they would have told you before you posted it on the web
The bluespotted stingray's scientific name is Neotrygon kuhlii.
The stingray is a vertebrate, scientifically classified in the phylum Chordata. Its skeleton is made of cartilage instead of bone, but it still has a vertebrate skeleton. AND IT IS A CHORDATEStingrays are vertebrates
Classifying all animals that swim in the same phylum is overly broad as swimming is a behavior rather than a specific shared evolutionary trait. Animals that swim can belong to different phyla based on their anatomical and genetic characteristics. Grouping them solely based on swimming behavior would lead to an inaccurate and misleading classification system.
Superregnum: EukaryotaRegnum: AnimaliaSubregnum: EumetazoaSuperphylum: DeuterostomiaPhylum: ChordataSubphylum: VertebrataInfraphylum: GnathostomataClassis: ChondrichthyesSubclassis: ElasmobranchiiSuperordo: RajomorphiiOrdo: RajiformesSuperfamilia: DasyatoideaFamilia: DasyatidaeGenera: Dasyatis - Himantura - Makararaja - Pastinachus - Pteroplatytrygon - Taeniura - Urogymnus And what does all of this mean? Every living thing is classified by a binomial naming system that has seven level: Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species (and certain sub and supra levels as needed) . What we have up here is the binomial path that leads down to the Stingrays. To name a particular stingray you now have to decide which Genus it is that you want and then get yourself a list of species that belong to the Genus. To get the name of a particular species you have to have a Genus and species.
The scientific name for the stingray is Dasyatis pastinaca, also known as Trygon pastinaca. It is a cartilaginous fish characterized by its flattened body and whip-like tail with a venomous stinger.
A stingray can swim at speeds of up to 25 miles per hour in short bursts when escaping from predators or hunting for prey.
Stingray - 1964 Deep Heat 1-19 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Stingray - 1964 Hostages of the Deep 1-37 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
A stingray usually lives at the bottom of coral reefs. But mainly speaking, no.
no. they swim. can't breath out of water. have gills for a reason, and they are related to sharks.
Most doubtful. And why would they want to? They are fish.
In deep water
Carp swim an average of between 20 to 30 feet deep but have been known to swim as deep as 50 feet. They basically will go as deep as needed to get to their food.
yes
people that swim deep down in the ocean
laidybirds are ladybugs, and no, laidybirds can NOT swim in deep waters. they would die like most insets do in water.
Its better to swim in the deep water but if you have a child its safe to swim in the shallow water.