Chaunax albatrossae, Ho & Ma, 2022

Ho, Hsuan-Ching & Ma, Wen-Chun, 2022, Four new species of the frogmouth genus Chaunax (Lophiiformes: Chaunacidae) from Taiwan and the Philippines, Zootaxa 5189 (1), pp. 146-179 : 150-158

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5189.1.17

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1CC873C2-862F-444F-99BF-3CA8383508F1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7125197

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/04839D32-DD22-42B8-868A-46FB5017D48C

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:04839D32-DD22-42B8-868A-46FB5017D48C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Chaunax albatrossae
status

sp. nov.

Chaunax albatrossae sp. nov.

English name: Albatross frogmouth

Figs. 5 View FIGURE 5 , 6A View FIGURE 6 ; Tables 1‒4 View TABLE 1 View TABLE 2 View TABLE 3 View TABLE 4

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:04839D32-DD22-42B8-868A-46FB5017D48C

Holotype. MNHN 2005-0517 View Materials (77.3 mm SL), ca. 13°38’N, 121°39’E, off Luzon Island , Philippines, 195–200 m, 1 Dec. 1973. GoogleMaps

Paratypes. Seven specimens, 59.3‒137.7 mm SL, all from Philippines : MNHN 2005-0608 View Materials (2 specimens, 59.3– 93.5 mm SL), 12°19’58.8’’N, 121°42’0’’E, Tablas Strait , between Mindoro and Tablas Island, 673–675 m, 4 Jun. 1985 GoogleMaps ; MNHN 2005-0876 View Materials (3, 44.9–119.2), 12°10’4.8’’N, 121°45’0’’E, Tablas Strait , between Mindoro and Tablas Island, 700–702 m, 4 Jun. 1985 GoogleMaps ; USNM 168872 View Materials (1, 113.7), 8°34’48’’N, 124°1’22.8’’E, Iligen Bay, off Mindanao Island , 8 Aug. 1909 GoogleMaps ; USNM 168883 View Materials (1, 137.7), 10°0’0’’N, 125°6’36’’E, Sogod Bay, off Leyte Island , 3‒1412 m, 31 Jul. 1909 GoogleMaps .

Etymology. This species is named after the vessel USFC Albatross, treated as feminine, in service with the United States Bureau of Fisheries in the late 1800s and early 1900s, which collected the first two specimens of the present species.

Diagnosis. A small species (reaching 137.7 mm SL) of the C. abei species group with dark gray mouth cavity and dark brown to black gill chamber and gill rakers; skin covered with short, simple spinules; lateral-line neuromasts BD 2–4 (mainly 3), GH 12–13, BI 28–33 (30–32); GRii 10–12 (11); eye large (9.6‒12.0% SL); head relatively long (42.4‒46.3% SL), pre-preopercular length 31.1‒32.1% SL, predorsal length 51.1‒53.0% SL, upper-jaw 25.0‒26.2% SL; peritoneum black; body in preserved state uniformly creamy-white, including esca.

Description. Morphometric (expressed as % SL) and meristic data are given in Tables 1‒4 View TABLE 1 View TABLE 2 View TABLE 3 View TABLE 4 . Data for holotype provided below followed by ranges for paratypes in parentheses, when different.

D III, 12; P 12 (11‒12, mainly 12); A 7; C 9. Lateral-line neuromasts: AB 11 (10‒11); AC 8; BD 3 (2–4); CD 6 (5–7, mainly 5‒6); DG 3; EF 6; FG 3; GH 12/13 (12‒13); BB 6; BB’ 4; BI 32/33 (28–33, mainly 30‒32), including 2/3 (2–4) on caudal fin. Gill rakers: GRi 4 +12 (10‒12)=16 (14–16); GRii 11 (10–12); GRiii 1+11 (10‒11)=12 (11 or 12); GRiv 10 (9‒10).

Head length 2.3 (2.2–2.4) in SL; head width 5.5 (5.3–5.7) in SL, 2.4 (2.3–2.4) in HL; predorsal length 1.9 (1.9– 2.0) in SL; pre-gill-opening length 1.6 (1.5–1.7) in SL; pre-preopercular length 3.2 (3.1–3.2) in SL, 1.4 (1.3–1.5) in HL; upper jaw 3.9 (3.8–4.0) in SL, 1.7 (1.7–1.8) in HL; illicial length 12.0 (11.8–12.6) in HL; pre-illicial length 13.8 (13.4–14.5) in HL; illicial trough length 6.4 (5.5–7.1) in HL; eye diameter 4.5 (4.2–4.8) in HL; post-anus length (TL1) 3.1 (2.8–3.2) in SL, 1.4 (1.3–1.4) in HL; post-dorsal length (TL2) 5.1 (4.9–5.2) in SL, 2.2 (2.1–2.3) in HL; post-anal length (TL3) 5.7 (5.3–6.5) in SL, 2.5 (2.3–2.8) in HL; caudal-peduncle height 5.2 (5.0–5.4) in HL; caudalfin length 3.4 (3.2–3.7) in SL, 1.5 (1.4–1.6) in HL.

Body slender but head globular, skull slightly elevated posteriorly. Skin thin, loose and flaccid, semi-transparent. Pectoral- and pelvic-fin rays with free tips. Caudal peduncle relatively long and slender, slightly depressed, tapering posteriorly.

Illicium short and stout, esca with large central tongue (sensu Le Danois, 1978) bearing many thin cirri. Illicial trough broadly rounded or oval, flat, relatively short and broad, subequal in length to diameter of eye pupil. Interorbital space flat and broad.

Dermal spinules relatively short and thin, all straight and simple ( Fig. 6A View FIGURE 6 ); 4 or 5 rows of spinules in front of illicial trough; no spinules on illicial trough or illicial base; 3 or 4 pairs of spinules flanking lateral-line neuromasts.

Teeth on both jaws slender, fang-like. Band of 6–7 irregular tooth rows on upper jaw, tooth length gradually increasing from outer to inner rows; 3–4 irregular rows of teeth on lower jaw, in same arrangement as on upper jaw. Teeth on vomer small, in approximately 3 irregular rows, separated into 2 patches by medial gap. Teeth on palatine small, in elongate patch close to outer end of corresponding vomerine patch.

Cirri present on surfaces of both jaws and lateral sides of body, mainly associated with lateral-line canals; no cirri on dorsal surface of head, supraocular membranes or lower part of maxilla.

Coloration. Fresh coloration unknown but presumably uniformly pinkish, with or without colored spots or patches. Preserved specimens light brownish without marks or spots; esca creamy-white, most cirri pale or brownish distally, but some uniformly brown on anterior surface; tongue and mouth cavity blackish (some paratypes paler than others following long-term preservation); gill chamber mostly blackish, paler on ventral surface; gill arches uniformly blackish, except rakers and filaments pale; peritoneum black.

Size. Attaining 137.7 mm SL (USNM 168883); apparently a small species.

Distribution. Type series collected from central Philippines at depths of 195–702 m, excluding one specimen (USNM 168883) with imprecise depth record of 3‒1412 m. This species apparently rare in collections, possibly reflecting either low population size or restricted distribution.

Remarks. This new species is quite unusual in having a dark mouth cavity and gill chamber, something that is rare in chaunacids. Four other chaunacid species, three of them newly described below in the C. fimbriatus species group, do possess this feature but can be easily separated from C. albatrossae by the cirri on the dorsal surface of their heads and other diagnostic characters given in their respective accounts. Another species Chaunacops melanostomus , which has a uniformly dark brown body, also has dark mouth cavity and gill chamber.

All the specimens comprising the type series of C. albatrossae were initially identified by us as Chaunax apus Lloyd, 1909 ( Fig. 7A View FIGURE 7 ), a species that also occurs in the Philippines, because both species have a uniform, creamywhite color when preserved and they share similar proportions. But the new species differs from C. apus in having a dark gray or dark brown mouth cavity and gill chamber (vs. uniformly pale); relatively short and fine, uniformly straight dermal spinules ( Fig. 6A View FIGURE 6 ; vs. slender and curved, Fig. 6B View FIGURE 6 ); GH 12‒13 (vs. 12–19, mainly 14–16); and BI 28‒33 (vs. 30‒43, mainly 37‒40).

Chaunax albatrossae is likely sympatric with C. breviradius but not with C. abei . It has a relatively larger eye diameter, longer head, longer pre-opercular, predorsal and pre-gill opening lengths and longer upper-jaw length than either C. abei ( Figs. 7B, C View FIGURE 7 ) or C. breviradius ( Figs. 7D, E View FIGURE 7 ) from the South China Sea ( Table 4 View TABLE 4 ), as well as the other members of the C. abei species group in the Indo-West Pacific region besides C. apus (Ho, pers. data). Moreover, C. albatrossae has short, simple dermal spinules ( Fig. 6A View FIGURE 6 ), different from the mixture of bifurcate and simple spinules in C. abei ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ) but similar to those of C. breviradius ( Fig. 6D View FIGURE 6 ).

TABLE 4. Morphometric data of four species in Chuanax abei species group. HT=holotype.

    C. abei   C. albatrossae sp. nov.   C. apus     C. breviradius  
  HT Types, non-types HT Types   HT Non-types   HT Types, non-types
SL (mm) 81.1 92.0‒187 (n=23) 77.3 59.3‒119 (n=5) 83.0 104‒256 (n=25) 108.6 51.5‒137.6 (n=36)
In % SL   Mean (Range) SD   Mean (Range) SD   Mean (Range) SD   Mean (Range) SD
Head length 37.2 39.3 (36.9‒41.8) 1.3 42.4 43.9 (42.4‒46.3) 1.7 38.5 (36.6‒40.1) 1.0 41.1 39.9 (36.1‒43.6) 1.8
Head width 16.8 17.4 (16.0‒20.1) 1.1 17.7 18.6 (17.6‒20.4) 1.1 15.5 (13.3‒17.3) 1.1 16.7 17.1 (15.2‒19.4) 1.0
Pre-preopercular length 26.5 27.1 (25.1‒28.8) 0.9 31.3 31.6 (31.1‒32.1) 0.4 30.1 26.2 (24.2‒28.8) 1.4 26.5 27.5 (25.7‒30.2) 1.1
Pre-dorsal length 48.5 49.7 (45.0‒53.4) 2.4 51.1 52.1 (51.1‒53.0) 0.8 45.1 (43.3‒48.3) 1.2 47.2 48.7 (44.6‒53.5) 2.4
Pre-gill opening length 61.3 62.9 (60.4‒64.6) 1.2 66.9 63.2 (59.5‒66.9) 3.0 57.3 58.5 (56.5‒60.0) 1.0 62.7 63.7 (59.1‒67.8) 2.2
Illicial length 3.9 4.1 (3.3‒4.9) 0.4 3.4 3.6 (3.2‒3.9) 0.3 3.4 (2.7‒4.1) 0.4 5.3 (4.0‒6.3) 0.6
Illcial trough length 6.9 7.8 (6.8‒9.3) 0.6 6.0 7.1 (6.0‒7.9) 0.8 5.2 (4.3‒7.1) 0.8 6.4 8.3 (6.4‒9.9) 0.7
Pre-illicial trough 2.6 3.8 (3.1‒4.6) 0.4 3.6 3.1 (2.4‒3.6) 0.4 2.9 (1.4‒4.1) 0.8 3.7 4.4 (3.2‒5.5) 0.6
Eye diameter 7.8 8.3 (7.5‒9.6) 0.6 10.2 10.3 (9.6‒12.0) 1.0 8.8 8.0 (6.9‒9.7) 0.8 7.7 8.0 (6.4‒10.2) 0.9
Upper jaw length 19.4 20.4 (18.8‒22.2) 0.9 25.0 25.4 (25.0‒26.2) 0.5 21.2 20.4 (19.1‒22.1) 0.9 21.5 21.2 (19.0‒24.2) 1.1
Post-anus length (TL1) 31.2 30.7 (28.1‒33.9) 1.7 32.1 32.7 (30.9‒35.3) 1.7 32.4 34.4 (31.9‒37.9) 1.7 30.9 30.6 (27.0‒34.8) 1.6
Post-dorsal length (TL2) 18.0 18.1 (16.6‒22.8) 1.5 20.3 19.8 (19.2‒20.3) 0.5 20.4 19.7 (17.2‒23.8) 1.8 17.2 17.1 (14.4‒20.6) 1.5
Post-anal length (TL3) 15.0 16.0 (14.2‒18.6) 1.3 18.8 17.6 (15.3‒18.8) 1.3 18.0 16.8 (14.6‒19.1) 1.4 14.3 15.5 (12.4‒18.6) 1.6
Caudal peduncle depth 7.6 8.2 (6.7‒9.3) 0.5 8.4 8.4 (8.1‒8.9) 0.3 7.4 (7.0‒7.8) 0.3 8.2 8.4 (7.7‒9.2) 0.4
Caudal fin length 32.3 32.0 (29.1‒36.3) 1.9 31.3 29.5 (27.2‒31.3) 1.9 28.5 (25.7‒31.9) 1.9 28.6 30.2 (25.4‒35.3) 2.2
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