Title: Floridas freshwater stingrays:
1Floridas freshwater stingrays Atlantic
stingrays of the St. Johns River.
Jim Gelsleichter Center for Shark Research
2Freshwater elasmobranchs diversity and
distribution
Sharks
Rays
3The St. Johns River the river of lakes
- Ancient intracoastal lagoon system
- Longest river in FL (310 miles)
- Width varies (2 miles)
- Slow moving, poor flushing
- Commercially/recreationally impt.
4The Atlantic stingray Dasyatis sabina
- Most abundant elasmobranch on SE U.S. coast
- Small (
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6Differences in osmoregulation
WATER SALT
WATER
Low urea
urea
Marine elasmobranch
Euryhaline elasmobranch (bull shark)
No urea
Low urea
Obligate freshwater ray (potamotrygonid)
D. sabina in St. Johns River
7Ecological differences
8Goals of present study Role of calcitonin in
reproduction and development of elasmobranchs
Calcitonin 32 amino acid peptide hormone
9Role of calcitonin in D. sabina.
Objective Investigate calcitonin bioactivity in
Atlantic stingrays, Dasyatis sabina, throughout
reproduction
- Specific objectives
- Evaluate changes in UBG development/activity
- Re-evaluate serum CT profiles in male and female
stingrays - Immunolocalization of CT and CT-binding sites in
tissues
- Why stingrays?
- largest UBG of all elasmobranchs
- highest serum CT
- availability of dasyatid CT
10Reproduction in D. sabina
aplacental viviparity with uterolactation
- Reproductive cycle of D. sabina
- annual cycle
- 7-month male sperm storage/mating
- 1-4 pups/litter
- 4-month gestation
11Animal collection
Lake Jesup
12Sampling procedures
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