Like all members of eagle rays, they demonstrate ovoviviparity.[3] Ovulation and birth occurred in May, June and July, with a low fecundity, large size at maturity and birth and a continuous and synchronous annual reproductive cycle.[4]
^Burgos-Vázquez, María I.; Chávez-García, Valeria E.; Cruz-Escalona, Víctor H.; Navia, Andrés F.; Mejía-Falla, Paola A. (2019-01-21). "Reproductive strategy of the Pacific cownose ray Rhinoptera steindachneri in the southern Gulf of California". Marine and Freshwater Research. 70 (1): 93–106. doi:10.1071/MF18096. ISSN1448-6059.
^Bizzarro, Joseph J.; Smith, Wade D.; Márquez-Farías, J. Fernando; Hueter, Robert E. (April 2007). "Artisanal fisheries and reproductive biology of the golden cownose ray, Rhinoptera steindachneri Evermann and Jenkins, 1891, in the northern Mexican Pacific". Fisheries Research. 84 (2): 137–146. Bibcode:2007FishR..84..137B. doi:10.1016/j.fishres.2006.10.016. ISSN0165-7836.
^Violante-González, Juan; Santos-Bustos, Nataly G.; Monks, Scott; Pulido-Flores, Griselda; García-Ibáñez, Sergio; Rojas-Herrera, Agustín A. (2018-05-11). "Parasite community of the golden cownose ray Rhinoptera steindachneri Evermann and Jenkins 1891 (Chondrichthyes: Myliobatidae), in Acapulco Bay, Guerrero, Mexico". Journal of Natural History. 52 (17–18): 1115–1131. Bibcode:2018JNatH..52.1115V. doi:10.1080/00222933.2018.1452305. ISSN0022-2933.