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・ Mottled duck
・ Mottled eagle ray
・ Mottled eel
・ Mottled false moray
・ Mottled flowerpecker
・ Mottled frog
・ Mottled fusilier
・ Mottled grouper
・ Mottled mojarra
・ Mottled moray
・ Mottled owl
・ Mottled petrel
・ Mottled piculet
・ Mottled pug
・ Mottled sculpin
Mottled skate
・ Mottled snapping prawn
・ Mottled spinetail
・ Mottled swift
・ Mottled tree frog
・ Mottled triplefin
・ Mottled tuco-tuco
・ Mottled Umber
・ Mottled whistler
・ Mottled wood owl
・ Mottled-tailed shrew mouse
・ Mottley
・ Motto
・ Motto (disambiguation)
・ Motto (Tanpopo song)


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Mottled skate : ウィキペディア英語版
The mottled skate (''Raja pulchra'') is a species of skate, family Rajidae. An inhabitant of shallow coastal waters, it is found in the northwestern Pacific Ocean off Korea, Japan, and China. This species grows to long and has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc with a long snout. It is characterized by a covering of prickles above and below its snout but not elsewhere on its body, and a dark ring in the middle of each "wing" (though this may be indistinct in adults).The diet of the mottled skate consists of shrimps, cephalopods, bony fishes, and crabs. It is oviparous, with females producing egg capsules almost year-round. With the similar big skate (''R. binoculata''), it is one of only two skate species that regularly places multiple embryos (up to five) into a single egg case. The mottled skate is valued for food in South Korea and Japan. It is subject to heavy fishing, both intentional and otherwise, throughout its range, and its population has declined substantially since the 1980s. As a result, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed it as Vulnerable.==Taxonomy==The mottled skate was scientifically described by ichthyologist Liu Fah-Hsuen in a 1932 issue of ''The Science Reports of National Tsing Hua University''.Eschmeyer, W.N. (ed.) (''pulchra, Raja'' ). Catalog of Fishes electronic version (February 19, 2010). Retrieved on April 3, 2010. The type specimen has since been lost. Systematic studies have shown that this and five other species of ''Raja'' in the northern Pacific belong to a separate genus, which has yet to be named.

The mottled skate (''Raja pulchra'') is a species of skate, family Rajidae. An inhabitant of shallow coastal waters, it is found in the northwestern Pacific Ocean off Korea, Japan, and China. This species grows to long and has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc with a long snout. It is characterized by a covering of prickles above and below its snout but not elsewhere on its body, and a dark ring in the middle of each "wing" (though this may be indistinct in adults).
The diet of the mottled skate consists of shrimps, cephalopods, bony fishes, and crabs. It is oviparous, with females producing egg capsules almost year-round. With the similar big skate (''R. binoculata''), it is one of only two skate species that regularly places multiple embryos (up to five) into a single egg case. The mottled skate is valued for food in South Korea and Japan. It is subject to heavy fishing, both intentional and otherwise, throughout its range, and its population has declined substantially since the 1980s. As a result, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed it as Vulnerable.
==Taxonomy==
The mottled skate was scientifically described by ichthyologist Liu Fah-Hsuen in a 1932 issue of ''The Science Reports of National Tsing Hua University''.〔Eschmeyer, W.N. (ed.) (''pulchra, Raja'' ). Catalog of Fishes electronic version (February 19, 2010). Retrieved on April 3, 2010.〕 The type specimen has since been lost. Systematic studies have shown that this and five other species of ''Raja'' in the northern Pacific belong to a separate genus, which has yet to be named.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The mottled skate (''Raja pulchra'') is a species of skate, family Rajidae. An inhabitant of shallow coastal waters, it is found in the northwestern Pacific Ocean off Korea, Japan, and China. This species grows to long and has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc with a long snout. It is characterized by a covering of prickles above and below its snout but not elsewhere on its body, and a dark ring in the middle of each "wing" (though this may be indistinct in adults).The diet of the mottled skate consists of shrimps, cephalopods, bony fishes, and crabs. It is oviparous, with females producing egg capsules almost year-round. With the similar big skate (''R. binoculata''), it is one of only two skate species that regularly places multiple embryos (up to five) into a single egg case. The mottled skate is valued for food in South Korea and Japan. It is subject to heavy fishing, both intentional and otherwise, throughout its range, and its population has declined substantially since the 1980s. As a result, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed it as Vulnerable.==Taxonomy==The mottled skate was scientifically described by ichthyologist Liu Fah-Hsuen in a 1932 issue of ''The Science Reports of National Tsing Hua University''.Eschmeyer, W.N. (ed.) (''pulchra, Raja'' ). Catalog of Fishes electronic version (February 19, 2010). Retrieved on April 3, 2010. The type specimen has since been lost. Systematic studies have shown that this and five other species of ''Raja'' in the northern Pacific belong to a separate genus, which has yet to be named.」の詳細全文を読む



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