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The other main order of cartilaginous fishes to be found
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around the Andaman's reefs is the rays,
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and most common of these is the bluespotted stingray.
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This stingray's coloration and common name
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make it often confused with the more circular blue-spotted stingray
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found in the Gulf of Thailand,
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which belongs to a different genus.
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The bluespotted stingray is found on sandy bottoms
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at sites such as East of Eden in the Similans.
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The neutral color of the larger Jenkins whipray
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camouflages it well against the seabed.
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This ray has a pair of sharp and venomous spines near the base of its tail,
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and the name whipray comes from the ray's ability to whip it's long tail over fast
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and administer a nasty sting to a predator at any part of its circumference.
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The ray takes water in through its spiracle, a hole just behind the eye.
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This water can be blown out through the mouth
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to excavate food from the substrate.
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Another large stingray common to the area is the blotched fantail ray.
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This impressive species can grow nearly 2 meters in diameter
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and is often one of the highlights of dives in the Andaman.
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Blotched fantail rays are most impressive when they aggregate in shoals.
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Occasionally they can be witnessed in large numbers.
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I encountered this shoal of some 30 individuals at Black Rock.
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They had possibly gathered to mate.
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Another visitor to Black Rock and other deep-water sites
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is the spotted eagle ray.