Last, P.R. & Gomon, M.F. (1987)
New Australian fishes. Part 15. New species of Trygonoptera and Urolophus. Memoirs of the Museum Victoria, 48(1), 63–72
Mould, B. (1997)
Classification of the recent Elasmobranchii. Copyright Brian Mould 1997
Hutchins, J.B. (2001)
Checklist of the fishes of Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Supplement 63, 9–50
Compagno, L.J.V. (2005)
Checklist of living Chondrichthyes. In W.C. Hamlett (Ed.), Reproductive biology and phylogeny of chondrichthyes: sharks, rays and chimaeras, Vol. 3 (pp. 503–548). Science Publishers, Endfield, USA
Last, P.R. & Marshall, L.J. (2006)
Urolophus mitosis IUCN 2012, IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, Version 2012.2, https://www.iucnredlist.org
Schwartz, F.J. (2008)
A survey of tail spine characteristics of stingray species (order Myliobatiformes) frequenting the eastern Pacific Ocean from the international dateline to the Americas. Journal of the North Carolina Academy of Science, 124(3), 72–81
Schwartz, F.J. (2008)
A survey of the tail spine characteristics of stingrays frequenting Indo-Pacific ocean areas between the International Date Line and the Chagos-Maldive Archipelago waters. Journal of the North Carolina Academy of Science, 124(2), 27–45
Last, P.R. & Stevens, J.D. (2009)
Sharks and Rays of Australia. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Vic.
Schwartz, F.J. (2009)
Ways to identify stingrays of the world possessing or lacking serrated stinging tail spines. Journal of the North Carolina Academy of Science, 125(3), 107–109
Last, P.R. & Yearsley, G.K. & White, W.T. (2016)
Stingarees, Family Urolophidae. In Last, P.R., White, W.T., Carvalho, M.R. de, Séret, B., Stehmann, M.F.W & Naylor, G.J.P(Eds.) Rays of the World. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne: 676–705
Weigmann, S. (2016)
Annotated checklist of the living sharks, batoids and chimaeras (Chondrichthyes) of the world, with a focus on biogeographical diversity. Journal of Fish Biology, 88(3), 837–1037
DOI: 10.1111/jfb.12874
Guinot, G. & Cavin, L. (2020)
Distinct Responses of Elasmobranchs and Ray-Finned Fishes to Long-Term Global Change. Frontiers in Ecololgy and Evolution, 7, Article 513
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2019.00513