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Jensen's skate (''Amblyraja jenseni''), also known as the shortail skate,Orlov, Alexie M, et al. “Deepwater Skates (Rajidae) Collected during the 2004 Cruises of R.V. ‘G.O. Sars’ and ‘M.S. Loran’ in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge Area.” ResearchGate, Jan. 2006. is a poorly known species of fish discovered in 2004 during a study of bottom ichthyofauna aboard the Norwegian RV ''G.O. Sars'', where four species were identified, including ''A. jensieni''.


Etymology

The skate is named in honor of Danish zoologist
Adolf Severin Jensen Adolf (also spelt Adolph or Adolphe, Adolfo and when Latinised Adolphus) is a given name used in German-speaking countries, Scandinavia, the Netherlands and Flanders, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Latin America and to a lesser extent in var ...
(1866–1953), of
Lund University , motto = Ad utrumque , mottoeng = Prepared for both , established = , type = Public research university , budget = SEK 9 billion


Description

Members of the family Rajidae carry uncharacteristically similar body plans. This makes visual identification of these individuals extremely difficult. Detailed visual descriptions of ''A. jenseni'' are hard to attain, so the description below may represent several of the family Rajidae and should not necessarily be used to differentiate them. ''A. jenseni'' is a medium-sized skate. Its maximum known length is 74.3 cm (29.3 in) for males and 85 cm (33 in) for females. Its coloration is chocolate-brown to gray-brown above with scattered darker spots. Ventral on the body appears a patchy white and brown mixture, except for the pelvic fin lobes and tail, which are darker. These white patches are on the snout, upper abdomen, nostrils, mouth gill slits, and anal opening. Its underside is smooth and its dorsal surface is densely covered with prickly scales. Two or three pairs of distinctive scapular thorns are on each shoulder, usually arranged in a triangle, and a row of 24-29 median thorns occur along the back, flanked by a row of smaller lateral thorns on the tail. The tail of the shorttail skate is relatively short. Sexual dimorphism in shorttail skates is present in pelvic fin structure that the males modify to act as copulatory claspers, as well as alternate disc lengths, horizontal diameter of the orbit, height of the tail at the pelvic fin tips, length of the third gill slit, and distances from the center of the anus to the first and second dorsal fins.


Distribution and habitat

This species of skate is believed to only be found in the North Atlantic, off the coasts of New England, Nova Scotia, Grand Banks of Newfoundland, Iceland, Ireland, Canada, and along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at depths of 167 to 2,548 m (548 to 8,360 ft), making it one of the deepest-occurring skates known.


Biology and ecology

Skates represent a critical consumer of invertebrates and small fish, representing a similar role as apex predators of the ecosystem. Little is documented about their feeding behavior, but like other of its family, it presumably would eat various cephalopods, crustaceans, and small bony fish such as rattails and teleost fishers. ''A. jenseni'' is presumed to be oviparous like other skates. but no observed reproduction cycles have been reported.


References


Further reading

*
''Amblyraja jenseni''
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020


External links


Species Description of ''Amblyraja jenseni ''at www.shark-references.com
{{Taxonbar, from=Q4667538 Taxa named by Henry Bryant Bigelow Taxa named by William Charles Schroeder Fish described in 1950 Amblyraja