Sunday, April 26, 2009

Thornback Rays stranding at Southend – March 26, 2009

The morning, stormy high tide at Chalkwell in Southend stranded a large ray on March 9, and the vertebra of this specimen, or more likely others, were found at Westcliff on March 11 and Southend on the 12th. The afternoon tide of March 16 stranded an undecayed specimen, curved and ventral-up on the high water mark at Thorpe Bay. It was a Thornback Ray Raja clavata lacking the yellow tag put on by Cefas for their Thames Ray Tagging and Survival 2007 - 08 study (‘’www.cefas.co.uk’’). After that the tides were generally at a lower level on the beach, but when the strandline of the afternoon tide of March 26 was studied at about the same height, the ray was found to have been converted into a curved skeleton which had moved 140 m to the east and over one groyne. It was ventral-up and showed the thin teeth of males in a head skeleton width of 125 mm, and a now partly preserved overall length of 0.5 m. Presumably it was eaten by gulls on the beach and then moved by the ides as they returned to the same elevation.