
If you love watching for fins in Onslow County, remember: not every fin belongs to a shark. Sharks, rays, skates, and sawfishes are all elasmobranchs—cartilaginous fishes with skeletons of flexible cartilage instead of bone. Along our beaches and in the New River estuary, you’ll most often meet rays and skates, the sharks’ closest cousins. Below are the species you’re most likely to spot, when they show up, what they eat, who eats them, their environmental preferences, and their conservation status.
Small, spade-shaped, and sand-colored, the Atlantic stingray frequents shallow, warm, and often brackish waters, including the lower New River and surf zones off Topsail. It’s one of the most euryhaline elasmobranchs (tolerant of a wide salinity range), which is why folks see them from tidal creeks to nearshore surf (Johnson & Snelson, 1996).
When to look: Late spring through fall in very shallow water on warm days (watch for “flying” jumps as they evade predators or parasites).
Give them space: Shuffle your feet in the shallows to avoid accidental tail-spine contact.
Diet (Prey): Worms, amphipods, small crustaceans, and mollusks, dug up from the sandy bottom.
Predators: Large sharks (bull, hammerhead), some large fish (groupers, snappers), and wading birds preying on juveniles.
Conservation status:
Bronze-backed and wing-tipped, cownose rays cruise past Topsail in late spring and summer, sometimes in tight schools. Large multi-year telemetry studies show cownose rays migrate seasonally along the Atlantic coast, using mid-Atlantic estuaries for pupping and mating, then overwintering off central Florida (Ogburn et al., 2018).
Local note: Schools moving along Onslow County beaches are most common mid- to late summer, especially on calm, clear mornings.
Diet (Prey): Hard-shelled bivalves (clams, oysters, scallops) and crabs, crushed with strong dental plates.
Predators: Large sharks such as sandbar, bull, and tiger sharks.
Conservation status:
Note: At risk due to low reproductive rates, heavy schooling, and targeted culling in parts of its range.
Two butterfly rays—smooth butterfly ray and spiny butterfly ray—occur only sporadically here, near the northern edge of their ranges. Long-term sampling in Onslow Bay recorded both species mostly April–November, usually as young individuals (Schwartz, 2011).
Where to look: Quiet sandy flats adjacent to inlets during warm months—rare sightings, treat them as a bonus.
Diet (Prey): Small benthic fishes, shrimp, and crabs.
Predators: Large sharks, particularly sandbar and hammerhead.
Conservation status:
Note: Populations declining globally; extremely rare in NC, where records are incidental.
Clearnose skates favor our nearshore sandy bottom habitats and show up all year, with peak catches outside the hottest months. In a recent year-round analysis of the North Carolina nearshore elasmobranch community, clearnose skates were among the most abundant species and were often juveniles, highlighting how our inner shelf provides important habitat (Roskar et al., 2024).
Local tip: Anglers bottom-fishing near the bar or just off the beach encounter skates more often in the cooler seasons.
Diet (Prey): Worms, amphipods, squid, and small fishes suctioned from the sand.
Predators: Large sharks (sandbar, sand tiger, smooth dogfish) and occasionally other large rays or skates.
Conservation status:
Note: Common, often caught as bycatch; no special protections beyond fishery quotas.
Elasmobranch egg cases—often called “mermaid’s purses”—sometimes wash up on our beaches in Onslow County. They are protective capsules laid by skates (relatives of sharks and rays). Each capsule once held a developing embryo. If you find one, it will most likely be an egg casing of a clearnose skate.
Rays and stingrays (Atlantic stingray, cownose ray, butterfly rays) give birth to live pups—so their egg cases will never be found.
Skates (like clearnose skate) are oviparous and the main source of egg cases on our shores.
Species | Egg Case Season | What to Expect on Beaches |
Clearnose Skate | Spring–Summer (Apr–Jul) | Freshly laid egg cases in spring; more likely to wash ashore in late spring/early summer. |
Little Skate (rare in Onslow) | Spring (Apr–May) & Fall (Oct–Dec) | Occasionally reported; smaller cases than clearnose. |
Atlantic Stingray, Cownose Ray, Butterfly Rays | None | Live-bearers (no egg cases). |
The presence of rays and skates in Onslow County shifts with water temperature and salinity. These factors determine when species move inshore, offshore, or migrate seasonally.
Species | Temperature Preference | Salinity Tolerance | Seasonal Pattern in Onslow Co. |
Atlantic Stingray | 15–30 °C (59–86 °F); prefers warm shallows | Freshwater → marine (highly euryhaline) | Common spring–fall in estuary & surf |
Cownose Ray | 20–30 °C (68–86 °F) | Marine & brackish; avoids freshwater | Peaks summer (Jun–Sep) in schools |
Butterfly Rays | 20–30 °C (68–86 °F) | Marine & estuarine | Rare, Apr–Nov in warm surf/inlets |
Clearnose Skate | 10–25 °C (50–77 °F); cooler months | Mostly marine; avoids low salinity | Most common fall–spring nearshore |
Smalltooth Sawfish | >20 °C (68 °F); cold-sensitive | Marine & brackish estuaries | Historically summer visitor; now extirpated locally |
Multiple studies show our coast hosts a seasonally shifting elasmobranch assemblage—from warm-season rays nearshore to cool-season species on the inner shelf—driven largely by temperature. While many surveys historically emphasized sharks, batoids (rays & skates) make up a large fraction of biomass on our continental shelf, and Onslow’s inner shelf and estuary mouths act as corridors and nurseries through the year (Roskar et al., 2024).
Smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata)—a ray with a chainsaw-like rostrum—is the most likely sawfish historically near NC, with a U.S. range that once extended to North Carolina. Today, it’s critically endangered and largely restricted to Florida, with only rare Northern reports (Brame et al., 2019).
Diet (Prey): Small schooling fishes (mullets, herrings) and crustaceans, stunned or stirred up with its saw-like snout.
Predators: Juveniles preyed on by large sharks; adults have few natural predators.If you ever encounter one, do not handle—it is federally protected.
Species | IUCN Status | U.S. Status | Prey (Diet) | Predators |
Atlantic Stingray (H. sabinus) | Least Concern | Not protected | Worms, crustaceans, mollusks | Sharks, large fish, birds (juveniles) |
Cownose Ray (R. bonasus) | Vulnerable | Not federally listed | Clams, oysters, scallops, crabs | Sharks (bull, tiger, sandbar) |
Clearnose Skate (R. eglanteria) | Least Concern | Managed in Northeast Skate FMP | Worms, amphipods, squid, small fish | Sharks, rays, humans (bycatch) |
Spiny Butterfly Ray (G. altavela) | Endangered | No U.S. federal listing | Small fish, shrimp, crabs | Sharks |
Smalltooth Sawfish (P. pectinata) | Critically Endangered | ESA Endangered; CITES Appendix I | Small fishes, crustaceans | Sharks (juveniles); few as adults |
Brame, A. B., Wiley, T., Carlson, J., Fordham, S., Musick, J., & Grubbs, R. D. (2019). Biology, ecology, and status of the smalltooth sawfish Pristis pectinata in the USA. Endangered Species Research, 39, 9–23. https://doi.org/10.3354/esr00947
Johnson, M. R., & Snelson, F. F., Jr. (1996). Reproductive life history of the Atlantic stingray, Dasyatis sabina (Pisces, Dasyatidae), in the freshwater St. Johns River, Florida. Bulletin of Marine Science, 59(1), 74–88.
Ogburn, M. B., Bangley, C. W., Aguilar, R., Fisher, R. A., Curran, M. C., Webb, S. F., & Hines, A. H. (2018). Migratory connectivity and philopatry of cownose rays Rhinoptera bonasus along the Atlantic coast, USA. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 602, 197–211. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps12686
Roskar, G., Morley, J. W., & Buckel, J. A. (2024). Seasonality and relative abundance within an elasmobranch assemblage near a major biogeographic divide. PLOS ONE, 19(6), e0300697. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0300697
Schwartz, F. J. (2011). Butterfly rays (Gymnuridae) of North Carolina. Journal of the North Carolina Academy of Science, 127(4), 275–284.
Sulikowski, J. A., Williams, L. J., Kneebone, J., & Tsang, P. C. W. (2022). Rangewide population structure of the clearnose skate Raja eglanteria. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 151(2), 143–155. https://doi.org/10.1002/tafs.10351
NOAA Fisheries. (n.d.). Smalltooth Sawfish (Pristis pectinata). Retrieved 2025, from https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/smalltooth-sawfish