In adopting a midwater lifestyle, the pelagic stingray exhibits several characteristics different from those of its bottom-dwelling relatives. While most stingrays propel themselves by undulating their disc margins, this species swims by oscillating (flapping) its pectoral fins in a manner approaching the "underwater flying" employed by
eagle rays. Oscillatory fin motions generate lift, thus improving cruising efficiency in open water at a cost to maneuverability. The pelagic stingray is adept at swimming backwards, which may compensate for the lower fine control offered by its swimming mode. Vision seems to be more important to the pelagic ray in finding food than in other stingrays. Compared to other members of its family, this species has less than one-third the density of
electroreceptive ampullae of Lorenzini on its underside. The ampullae also cover a smaller area, though not as small as in eagle rays, and are more evenly distributed between the ventral and dorsal surfaces. This ray can detect an
electric field of well under 1
nV/cm at a distance of up to , and may be able to pick up the minute electric fields produced by moving sea water. The
lateral line of the pelagic stingray, a complex system of
mechanoreceptors that detect nearby movement and
ocean currents, remains similar to other stingrays in covering a greater area on the ventral than the dorsal surface. However, this species is less responsive to mechanical than to visual stimuli. Pelagic stingrays may segregate by sex, vertically in that males are found in deeper water than females, and perhaps horizontally as well. Captive individuals often act highly aggressively towards
ocean sunfish (
Mola mola), biting and harassing them, particularly if they are hungry. This species is preyed upon by
oceanic whitetip sharks (
Carcharhinus longimanus),
great white sharks (
Carcharodon carcharias),
toothed whales, and other large, ocean-going
carnivores. Its all-around dark coloration likely serves to
camouflage it against its featureless habitat. The
venom on its tail spine is also quite potent, causing it to be avoided by other fishes. Known
parasites of this species include the
tapeworms
Acanthobothrium benedeni,
A. crassicolle, and
A. filicolle,
Rhinebothrium baeri and
R. palombii, and
Tetragonocephalum uarnak, and the
monogenean
Entobdella diadema.
Feeding The pelagic stingray is an active predator that captures prey by wrapping its pectoral fins around it, before manipulating it to the mouth. It is the only stingray in which both sexes have pointed teeth, for grasping and cutting into slippery prey. A wide variety of
organisms are represented in its diet:
crustaceans including
amphipods,
krill, and
larval
crabs,
molluscs including
squid,
octopus, and
pteropods,
bony fishes including
herring,
mackerel,
sea horses and
filefish,
comb jellies and
medusae, and
polychaete worms. Off California, pelagic stingrays hunt large mating aggregations of squid that form from November to April. Off Brazil, this species follows groups of
Atlantic cutlassfish (
Trichiurus lepturus) towards the coast in January and February, with both predators seeking small schooling fishes. Juvenile rays consume 6–7% of their body weight in food per day, which declines to just above 1% in adults.
Life history Like other stingrays, the pelagic stingray is
aplacental viviparous: the developing
embryos are at first nourished by
yolk, which is later supplanted by histotroph ("
uterine milk", containing
proteins,
lipids, and
mucus); the mother delivers the histotroph through numerous thread-like extensions of the uterine
epithelium called "trophonemata", which feed into the enlarged spiracles of the embryo. Females have only one functional
ovary and uterus, on the left, and may produce two litters per year. Mating occurs from March to June in the northwestern Atlantic, and in late spring in the southwestern Atlantic. Females are capable of storing
sperm internally for more than a year, allowing them to wait for favorable environmental conditions in which to
gestate their young. When first passed into the uterus, a batch of
fertilized eggs are contained in a single membraneous capsule tapered at both ends. Shortly after, the capsule ruptures to release the eggs, and is expelled from the uterus. The
gestation period may be the shortest of any shark or ray, lasting only 2–4 months, during which time the embryos increase a hundredfold in mass. In the Pacific, females give birth in winter from November to March in a nursery area near Central America, prior to their northward migration. Similarly, in the northwestern Atlantic, birthing seems to occur in winter when the females are in warm southerly waters, possibly off the
West Indies. However, records also exist of two possibly anomalous females that were pregnant much earlier in the year and would have given birth in August or September, before their southward migration. In the southwestern Atlantic, birthing occurs in summer around January, again in warmer water towards the equator. As opposed to other regions, in the Mediterranean females give birth in summer before moving to warmer waters. The litter size ranges from 4 to 13 (average six), and does not increase with the size of the female. Newborns measure across. Rays in captivity, with ample food, grow at an average annual rate of (disc width), while rays in the wild grow at an average annual rate of only . The food intake and growth rate of adults are highest in January–February and July–August, and lowest in March–April and October–November. Males reach
sexual maturity at across and two years of age, and females at and three years of age. This species may live up to 10–12 years. One of the most prolific rays, its intrinsic population growth rate is up to 31% a year. ==Human interactions==