Lessiniabatis

An illustration of the extinct stingray Lessiniabatis. It has a round disc-shaped body with a pair of eyes and spiracles on top, but unlike other stingrays its tail is almost nonexistent, being tiny, stingless, and vestigial-looking. it's depicted with mottled green coloration in a camouflage Turing pattern.

Lessiniabatis aenigmatica was a rather strange stingray.

It lived around 50-48 million years ago during the early Eocene, in a shallow warm sea covering what is now Italy, with its three known fossil specimens all coming from the fish-rich Monte Bolca fossil beds.

About 60cm long (~2′), it had a round pancake-like body similar to many modern seafloor-dwelling stingrays – but uniquely it was also almost tailless, with only a tiny, slender, stingless tail.

It wasn’t a particularly strong swimmer, instead probably spending most of its time buried in the muddy seafloor sediment. When on the move it likely swam along just above the surface of the seafloor using undulations of its fins, foraging for smaller bottom-dwelling animals like worms, molluscs, crustaceans, and fish.

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