Roa australis, Kuiter, 2004

Kuiter, Rudie H., 2004, Description of a New Species of Butterflyfish, Roa australis, from Northwestern Australia (Pisces: Perciformes: Chaetodontidae), Records of the Australian Museum 56 (2), pp. 167-171 : 168-171

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.0067-1975.56.2004.1424

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5E556B5E-B2B2-4AA0-B4ED-83AA11169357

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C482EF2E-210F-4BE4-8510-06221C66D77C

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C482EF2E-210F-4BE4-8510-06221C66D77C

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Roa australis
status

sp. nov.

Roa australis View in CoL n.sp.

Fig. 1 View Fig ; Tables 1, 2

Chaetodon modestus View in CoL (non Temminck & Schlegel, 1844); Gloerfelt- Tarp & Kailola, 1984: 220; Sainsbury et al., 1985: 245.

Type material. HOLOTYPE: WAM P.26215-001 (1, 112 mm SL) off Port Hedland, Western Australia, 18°24'S 119°02'E, 140 m, Sainsbury et al., 29 May 1978 GoogleMaps . PARATYPES: AMS I.21835-018 (14, 69.5–81 mm SL) Arafura Sea , Northern Territory, from 09°21'S 133°12'E to 09°22'S 133°10'E 156–164 m GoogleMaps , CSIRO Soela, Otter trawl, 5 November 1980 ; AMS I.22805-006 (6, 81– 119 mm SL) 170 km north of Port Hedland , Western Australia, 18°24'S 118°15'E, 150–156 m, J. Paxton & M. McGrouther, 28 March 1982 GoogleMaps ; CSIRO CA993 (1, 98 mm SL) northeast of Port Hedland , Western Australia, from 18°08'S 119°22'E to 18°07'S 119°21'E 161–173 m, FRV Soela, Frank & Bryce demersal trawl GoogleMaps , CSIRO, 12 June 1980 ; CSIRO CA2188 (1, 102 mm SL) northwest of Admiralty Gulf , Western Australia, from 13°44'S 124°15'E to 13°43'S 124°11'E, 120–121 m GoogleMaps , RV Hai Kung , bottom trawl , CSIRO, 28 March 1981 ; CSIRO CA4072-02 (1, 105 mm SL) north of Port Hedland , Western Australia, from 18°30.6'S 118°43.5'E to 18°31.8'S 118°45.3'E, 145– 140 m, FRV Soela, Frank & Bryce demersal trawl, A. Graham & G.Yearsley ( CSIRO), 12 June 1980 GoogleMaps ; NMV A2007 View Materials (1, 71 mm SL) northwest of Cape Voltaire , Western Australia, from 13°22'S 124°45'E to 124°48'E, 120 m, sand bottom, C.C. Lu GoogleMaps , RV Hai Kung, bottom trawl, Cruise 81–HK-2, 29 Mar 1981 ; NT S12974 View Materials -003 (5, 82–114) Arafura Sea , Northern Territory, HL90–46, 107– 109 m, Helen Larson, 30 Oct 1990 ; NT S13523 View Materials -002 (2, 92 & 94) Arafura Sea , Northern Territory, RW92–6, 97– 103 m , R. Williams , 18 Sep 1992 .

Diagnosis. Dorsal-fin rays XI, 20; anal-fin rays III, 17; pectoral-fin rays 14; tubed lateral-line scales 43; body depth 73.2% in SL; colour light brown, body uniformly pale, head somewhat darker, a dark elongated spot on soft dorsal fin between 2nd and 7th ray, bordered anteriorly by a pale area of similar width, and extending onto membrane between last spine and first ray.

Description. Dorsal fin rays XI, 19–23 (one specimen with X, 25, appears to be aberrant), spines long and broadly compressed near the base, proportionally shortening with growth, length of first spine 6.2–8.8 in SL, length of second spine 13.4–21.0 in SL (more than twice length of first), length of third spine 21.3–35.4 in SL (more than three times length of first), length of fourth spine 25.6–37.1 (usually slightly longer than third), following spines progressively shorter, last spine about equal in length to first soft ray, its length 17.6–23.9 in SL, soft rayed section follows sharp descent of body with gradually and progressively shorter rays; anal-fin rays III, 16–18, its second spine very long, reaching past third spine when spines depressed and pointing posteriorly, soft section mirroring soft part of dorsal fin; pectoral fin 13–16, usually 15 (36), 14 (10), or 16 (6) and rarely 13 (1); lateral-line scales 37–46, most with 39– 41 (c. 60%).

Body deep, 63.6–75% in SL, increasing proportionally with growth, and strongly compressed, 14–19.4% in SL; head profile steep above eye, and large, the length 36.1– 42% in SL, shortening proportionally with growth; snout moderately long, its length 28.2–34.6% in HL, shortening proportionally with growth; eye diameter slightly greater than length of snout, 30.1–36.1% in HL, reducing in size proportionally with growth; interorbital narrow, 19.6–27.3% in HL, increasing in width proportionally with growth; caudal peduncle moderately deep, its depth 11.3–14.1% in SL, and short, 4.6–6.4% in SL, the latter shortening proportionally with growth.

Origin of dorsal fin high above posterior end of head, the fin base long, its spinous section deeply incised and the base mostly horizontal, curving gradually downward from last few spines to caudal peduncle with soft section strongly angled downward, and the posterior margin of the fin vertical, base length of spinous and soft section equal in large specimens, soft section slightly shorter than spinous section in small specimens; anal fin directly below soft section of dorsal fin, mirroring its shape; ventral fin with strong spine and filamentous first soft ray.

Body and head covered with large ctenoid scales, gradually becoming smaller on nape and snout, extending far onto the median fins, ventral fin with an auxiliary scale, lateral line with tubed scales, rising at steep angle from origin with about 20 scales in an almost straight line, bending abruptly downward, following contour of soft dorsal fin, ending on caudal peduncle. Largest specimens examined 119 mm SL.

Preserved coloration (in alcohol). Large individuals uniformly pale brown, except for dark spot on soft dorsal fin, accompanied by an anterior pale band. Small individuals have strongly faded banding as described below in colour in life.

Live coloration white overall with three vertical brown to ochre bands, first, about pupil-width, from dorsal origin through eye and over cheek; second from below 4th and 5th dorsal spines, narrowing gradually and reaching to middle of abdomen; and 3rd from below last 3–4 dorsal spines towards caudal peduncle, narrowing and continuing onto anal fin to the end of its first soft ray; all fin spines white; first and second dorsal fin-spine membranes with black pigmentation; a black elongate spot on soft dorsal fin between 2nd and 7–8th rays with a broad white border anteriorly, the white extending ventrally slightly beyond the black, and a submarginal white band in the soft dorsal and anal fins; caudal fin clear with pale ochre basally; soft part of ventral fin brown to dusky ochre with black margin and tip.

Etymology. australis , from the Latin, meaning southern, in reference to its southern Hemisphere distribution.

Distribution. Roa australis occurs off the northwest coast of Australia. The species ranges from just south of the Rowley Shoals, northwest of Port Hedland, Western Australia to the Arafura Sea, Northern Territory. Specimens were collected between 97 and 173 m depth.

Remarks. The examination of specimens of Roa australis , R. excelsa , and R. modesta show no significant differences in meristic values ( Table 1). Published meristic values of R. jayakari ( Randall, 1995) fall well within the range of its congeners. Morphometric information on R. jayakari was obtained from photographs ( Allen et al., 1998; Kuiter, 2002). The 4 species show significant differences in morphometrics, but these are complicated by growth changes as shown for 3 of the 4 species ( Table 2). Features that are clearly different among species in large specimens do not necessarily differ in small individuals and due to proportional changes with growth, may increase in one species and decrease in another. However colour is markedly different among species ( Fig. 2 View Fig ) and diagnostic. Two species, R. modesta and R. jayakari share similarly marked dorsal fins. Each has a white-edged round ocellus on the soft-rayed section and a mostly black second spine. However, the shape of the spinous section differs, the profile is evenly round in R. modesta , versus virtually straight from the 4th to last spine in R. jayakari . R. modesta differs from the other 3 congeners in having a ventral broadening of the second dark band and the bands having dark, near black, margins that persist as brown stripes in preservation. Roa australis and R. excelsa share an elongated black spot on the soft dorsal fin and the black coloration of the second dorsal-fin spine. These two species differ greatly in the width and colour of their dark bands. In R. australis , the bands are narrow and do not extend dorsally onto the spines, whereas in R. excelsa , the bands are very broad dorsally and almost cover all the dorsal-fin spines, only leaving a small gap of white between the 6th and 8th spine. The species appear to be separated geographically, but distributions are not well understood due to the depths at which Roa spp occur.

Other material examined. Roa excelsa: BPBM 10867 (1, 71 mm SL) Oahu , Hawaiian Islands, 80 fathoms, Otter trawl, Robert Cordover, 25 March 1971; BPBM 10868 View Materials (1, 94 mm SL) Oahu , Hawaiian Islands, 75 fathoms, gill net, Thomas Clarke, 19–20 April 1971; BPBM 24754 View Materials (1, 105 mm SL) Oahu , Hawaiian Islands, 21°39'N 158°06'W 180–200 m, shrimp trawl, “Townsend Cromwell”, cruise 61, station 26, 17 October 1972; BPBM 24827 View Materials (1, 71 mm SL) GoogleMaps Oahu , Hawaiian Islands, 21°39'N 158°06'W 180–200 m, shrimp trawl, “Townsend Cromwell”, cruise 61, station 32, 18 October 1972 GoogleMaps .

Roa modesta: NT S 12725-014 (1, 51.6 mm SL) Wakasa Bay   GoogleMaps , Japan, 35°30'N 135°45'E, trawl, I. Nakamura, 10 November 1988; WAM P.30260-002 (2, 86 & 97 mm SL) western Wakasa Bay , Japan, 35°30'N 135°45'E, trawl, I. Nakamura, 10 November 1988 GoogleMaps .

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Mark McGrouther (AMS), Arnold Suzumoto (BPBM), Alastair Graham (CSIRO), Dianne Bray (NMV), Gavin Dally (NTM), and Sue Morrison (WAM) assisted with loans from their respective institutions. Barry Hutchins (WAM) and Helen Larson (NTM) facilitated the loans. Barry Hutchins (WAM) provided the photograph of the holotype.

WAM

Western Australian Museum

CSIRO

Australian National Fish Collection

RV

Collection of Leptospira Strains

NMV

Museum Victoria

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Chaetodontidae

Genus

Roa

Loc

Roa australis

Kuiter, Rudie H. 2004
2004
Loc

Chaetodon modestus

Sainsbury, K 1985: 245
1985
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF