Barndoor skate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The barndoor skate, Dipturus laevis, is a species of marine cartilaginous fish in the skate family (family Rajidae) of the order Rajiformes. It is native to the northwestern ...
Common skate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The common skate or blue skate (Dipturus flossada [1]) is the largest skate in the world. [2] Historically, it was one of the most abundant skates in the Northeast Atlantic and ...
ITIS Standard Report Page: Dipturus laevis
Kingdom: Animalia -- Animal, animals, animaux : Phylum: Chordata -- chordates, cordado, cordés : Subphylum: Vertebrata -- vertebrado, vertebrates, vertébrés
Dipturus laevis - Wikimedia Commons
This page was last modified on 6 October 2009, at 08:41. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License; additional terms may apply.
WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Dipturus batis (Linnaeus ...
Status : accepted: Record status : Checked by Taxonomic Editor: Rank : Species: Parent : Dipturus Rafinesque, 1810: Synonymised taxa : Batis vulgaris Couch, 1862 Propterygia ...
WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Dipturus oxyrinchus ...
Status : accepted: Record status : Checked by Taxonomic Editor: Rank : Species: Parent : Dipturus Rafinesque, 1810: Synonymised taxa : Dipturus oxyrhinchus (Linnaeus, 1758 ...
Dipturus batis - Wikispecies
This page was last modified on 15 February 2008, at 21:52. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License; additional terms may apply.
Dipturus polyommata (Argus Skate)
Taxonomic Notes: Transferred from Raja polyommata Ogilby, 1910. (See: Last, P.R. & Yearsley, G.K. 2002. Zoogeography and relationships of Australasian skates (Chondrichthyes ...
Dipturus laevis - iSpecies
A species search engine. iSpecies is a test of E O Wilson's idea of a web page for each species. The data displayed are generated "on the fly" by querying other data sources (learn ...
Dipturus batis, Blue skate : fisheries, gamefish
Eastern Atlantic: Norway, Iceland, the Faroes to Senegal, including western Mediterranean and western part of the Baltic. Extirpated by trawling from much of its former range ...