Copilot
Uw dagelijkse AI-companion
Ongeveer 19.400 resultaten
  1. Mustelus mosis, Arabian smooth-hound : fisheries, gamefish

  2. Arabische toonhaai - Wikipedia

  3. Mensen vragen ook naar
    Heemstra ( 1973) suggested that M. mosis was endemic to the northern Red Sea and considered the Arabian Sea population (from Persian Gulf to India and Sri Lanka) to be a separate subspecies, Mustelus mosis subspecies a [Heemstra, ms.].
    Mustelus mosis has been confirmed from all countries in the Arabian Sea (Maldives specimens need to be confirmed) and the Persian Gulf. No confirmed specimens or verified records were available for the east coast of India in the Bay of Bengal.
    In the northern Indian Ocean, only a single species of Mustelus is currently known to occur, Mustelus mosis Hemprich & Ehrenberg, 1899. This species was described from the Red Sea and also occurs throughout the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf (e.g. Henderson et al. 2007; Moore et al. 2012; Akhilesh et al. 2014 ).
    The Red Sea and Arabian Sea populations of Mustelus mosis differ in vertebral counts and degree of coverage of buccopharyngeal denticles in the mouth, but these characters alone are not considered strong enough evidence to separate into two species.
  4. Arabian smooth-hound - Wikipedia

  5. Mustelus mosis, Arabian Smoothhound

  6. Zoekopdrachten die u mogelijk leuk vindt

  7. Mustelus mosis - fish-commercial-names.ec.europa.eu

  8. Mustelus mosis | Shark-References

    WEBOccurs in continental waters, both inshore and offshore. Sometimes seen on coral reefs. Feeds on small bottom fishes, mollusks, and crustaceans [517] [20042] . Size / Weight / Age. 150 cm TL (male/unsexed; [517] ) …

  9. Arabian Smooth-Hound (Mustelus mosis) · iNaturalist

  10. WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Mustelus mosis …

  11. Mustelus mosis, Arabian smooth-hound : fisheries, gamefish

  12. WEB7 apr. 2021 · Abstract. The species of Mustelus Linck, 1790 occurring in the northern Indian Ocean are revised and a new species, Mustelus andamanensis sp. nov., is formally described. Previously considered to …