skate

created by root
(thing) by Tem42 (1.4 hr) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Sat Nov 13 1999 at 10:19:11

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
(Skates, rays, and sharks)
Superorder: Batoidea
(Rays)
Order: Rajiformes
Family: Rajidae
and
Family: Anacanthobatidae

Like sharks, but flatter. They look somewhat like a kite, or a cross between a butterfly and a squid. They have a thin body with two large 'wings' (technically, enlarged pectoral fins), and a flexible tale behind.

Skates are cartilaginous fish, and are closely related to sharks. They are a type of rays, and the families of skates include more than 200 different species.

Some species can get to be up to 4 feet long and weigh up to 100 pounds. Most are smaller. They are bottom dwellers, and eat other bottom dwellers such as sea squirts, snails, crabs and clams. Not humans, tho.

The mermaids' purses you find washed up on the beaches are the skates' egg sacks.

(definition) by Webster 1913 (print) Wed Dec 22 1999 at 3:10:11

Skate (?), n. [D. schaats. Cf. Scatches.]

A metallic runner with a frame shaped to fit the sole of a shoe, -- made to be fastened under the foot, and used for moving rapidly on ice.

Batavia rushes forth; and as they sweep, On sounding skates, a thousand different ways, In circling poise, swift as the winds, along, The then gay land is maddended all to joy. Thomson.

Roller skate. See under Roller.

 

© Webster 1913.


Skate, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Skated; p. pr. & vb. n. Skating.]

To move on skates.

 

© Webster 1913.


Skate, n. [Icel. skata; cf. Prov. G. schatten, meer-schatten, L. squatus, squatina, and E. shad.] Zool.

Any one of numerous species of large, flat elasmobranch fishes of the genus Raia, having a long, slender tail, terminated by a small caudal fin. The pectoral fins, which are large and broad and united to the sides of the body and head, give a somewhat rhombic form to these fishes. The skin is more or less spinose.

⇒ Some of the species are used for food, as the European blue or gray skate (Raia batis), which sometimes weighs nearly 200 pounds. The American smooth, or barn-door, skate (R. laevis) is also a large species, often becoming three or four feet across. The common spiny skate (R. erinacea) is much smaller.

Skate's egg. See Sea purse. -- Skate sucker, any marine leech of the genus Pontobdella, parasitic on skates.

 

© Webster 1913.

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