Reproduction at the
San Sebastian Aquarium egg case (mermaid's purse) Skates mate at the same nursery ground each year. In order to fertilize the egg, males use
claspers, a structure attached to the pelvic fins. The claspers allow them to direct the flow of semen into the female's
cloaca. Skates are
oviparous, meaning they lay eggs with very little development in the mother. This is one major difference from rays, which are
viviparous, meaning they give birth to live young. When a female skate is fertilized, a protected case forms around the embryo called an
egg case, or more commonly mermaid's purse. This egg case is then deposited out of the mother's body onto the ocean floor where the skates develop for up to 15 months before they enter the external environment.
Diet and feeding The majority of skates feed on bottom dwelling animals, such as shrimp, crab, oyster, clams, and other invertebrates. To feed on these animals they have grinding plates in their mouths. Skates are an influential part of the
food webs of demersal marine communities. They utilize similar resources to those of other upper trophic-level marine predators, such as seabirds, marine mammals, and sharks. The flattened body shape, ventral eyes and well developed spiracles of the skate allows them to live benthically, buried in the sediment or using a longitudinal undulation of the pectoral fins known as
Rajiform locomotion to glide along the water floor. Current research suggests that some species of skates, in addition to their Rajiform locomotion, use their pelvic fins to perform ambulatory locomotion. This form of locomotion performed by the skate is being explored as a possible origin for our own development of walking by looking for similar neural pathways used for movement between skates and animals walking on land. ==Skates versus stingrays==