Kyphosus gladius, Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm & Clements, Kendall D., 2013

Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm & Clements, Kendall D., 2013, Kyphosus gladius, a new species of sea chub from Western Australia (Teleostei: Kyphosidae), with comments on Segutilum klunzingeri Whitley, Zootaxa 3599 (1), pp. 1-18 : 4-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.218950

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D7A832A9-A4EF-4F5F-B44B-2EC115EB68FE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6148784

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CE9B2C0D-E9C5-4CC1-AF7B-D0D479FB84C7

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:CE9B2C0D-E9C5-4CC1-AF7B-D0D479FB84C7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Kyphosus gladius
status

sp. nov.

Kyphosus gladius View in CoL sp. nov.

(Common name: Gladius sea chub or gladius drummer) ( Figure 2–4 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 , Table 1)

Kyphosus sydneyanus View in CoL (non McCulloch 1920): Allen 1985: fig. 235 and 237.

Holotype. WAM P.33456-001, 255 mm SL, Canal Rocks, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33°40' S, 114°59' E, 30 May 2010.

Paratypes. 24 specimens. AMS.I 20233-008 (2 specimens), 78–94 mm SL, Canal Rocks, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33°40' S, 115°00' E, 1 Apr 1978; NMV A 30939 View Materials -001, 220 mm SL, Canal Rocks, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33°40' S, 114°59' E, 30 May 2010, collected with spear by SWK and KDC; NMV A 30940 View Materials , 381 mm SL, Rockingham, Point Peron, Western Australia, 32°16' S, 115°41' E, 29 May 2010, collected with spear by SWK and KDC; NMV A 30939 View Materials -002, 205 mm SL, Canal Rocks, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33°40' S, 114°59' E, 30 May 2010, collected with spear by SWK and KDC; WAM P. 20571, 457 mm SL, Denmark, Western Australia, 35°00' S, 117°20' E, unknown catch date; WAM P. 21747, 254 mm SL, Albany, Western Australia, 35°00' S, 117°52' E, unknown catch date; WAM P.27643-010, 76 mm SL, Bunkers Bay, Western Australia, 33°32' S, 115°02' E, 30 Jun 1932; WAM P.30668-001, 286 mm SL, Jurien Bay, Western Australia, 30°18' S, 115°00' E, unknown catch date; WAM P.30705-002, 49 mm SL, Rottnest Island, Western Australia, 32°05' S, 115°35' E, 6 May 1993; WAM P.33455-001 (4 specimens), 389–439 mm SL, Rockingham, Point Peron, Western Australia, 32°16' S, 115°41' E, 29 May 2010, collected with spear by SWK and KDC; WAM P.33456-002 (10 specimens), 207–286 mm SL, Canal Rocks, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33°40' S, 114°59' E, 30 May 2010, collected with spear by SWK and KDC.

Non-type material. SMNS 2673, 238 mm SL, King George Sound, Western Australia, Jun 1879.

Tissue samples. 20 specimens, six not stored, all collected with spear by SWK and KDC. WAM P.33455-001 (2 specimens), 29 May 2010, Perth, Western Australia, 32° 16'S, 113° 41'E, acc. no. KC136475 View Materials , KC136440 View Materials ; WAM P.33455-001, 29 May 2010, Perth, Western Australia, 32° 16'S, 113° 41'E, acc. no. KC136532 View Materials , JX908486 View Materials , KC 130503 View Materials , KC 130655 View Materials ; NMV A 30940 View Materials -011, 29 May 2010, Perth, Western Australia, 32° 16'S, 113° 41'E, acc. no. KC136412 View Materials , JX908438 View Materials , KC 130473 View Materials , KC 130662 View Materials ; NMV A 30939 View Materials -001 and NMV A 30939 View Materials -002 (2 specimens), 30 May 2010, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33° 40'S, 114° 59'E, acc. no. KC136501 View Materials , KC136371 View Materials ; WAM P.33456-002 (7 specimens), 30 May 2010, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33° 40'S, 114° 59'E, acc. no. KC136551 View Materials , KC136392 View Materials , KC136396 View Materials , KC136367 View Materials , KC136459 View Materials , KC136431 View Materials , KC136443 View Materials ; WAM P.33456-001 (holotype for K. gladius ), 30 May 2010, Yallingup Reef, Western Australia, 33° 40'S, 114° 59'E, acc. no. KC136460 View Materials , JX908393 View Materials , KC 130467 View Materials , KC 130615 View Materials ; no voucher, only tissue sample stored, 12 Jun 2000, Rottnest Island, Western Australia, 32° 00'S, 115° 34'E, acc. no. KC136484 View Materials , JX908416 View Materials , KC 130512 View Materials , KC 130589 View Materials ; no voucher, only tissue sample stored, 0 6 Jun 2009, Perth, Western Australia, 32° 16'S, 115° 41'E, acc. no. KC136556 View Materials ; no voucher, only tissue sample stored (3 specimens), 0 7 Jun 2009, Perth, Western Australia, 32° 16'S, 115° 41'E, acc. no. KC136490 View Materials , KC136379 View Materials , KC136567 View Materials ; no voucher, only tissue sample stored, 26 May 2010, Abrolhos Islands, Western Australia, 28° 29'S, 113° 44'E, acc. no. KC136561 View Materials .

Diagnosis. Distinguished from other species of Kyphosus from the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean by the following combination of characters: body elongate and compressed. Mouth terminal. Silvery line under eye, colour silvery to bluish metallic; operculum with a vertical green bar running down rear of preoperculum; dorsal part of body without dark counter-shading. Caudal peduncle depth, 9.9-11.8% SL; sixth dorsal fin spine length, 8.7–11.9 % SL; body depth, 33.3–41.6 % SL; 15–19 total gill rakers externally, 3–5 gill rakers on upper limb externally, 11–15 gill rakers on lower limb externally; 44–55 pored scales in lateral line, 55–63 scale rows in lateral line with or without pores, 49–57 scale rows in longitudinal row; 11–12 soft dorsal fin rays, 11–12 anal fin rays, 10+16 precaudal- and caudal vertebrae.

Description. Body elongate and relatively compressed (body depth: 33.3–41.6, mean 39.6 % SL), (body width: 12.6–19.3, mean 16.8 %SL). Caudal peduncle longer (18.7–26.5, mean 23.2 % SL) than deep (9.9-11.8, mean 11.0 % SL). Head 22.1–30.5 % SL (mean 25.3 % SL), frontal slope of head not steep, but smoothly pointed ( Figure 2 View FIGURE 2 and 3 View FIGURE 3 A). Interorbital width 10.7–12.3 % SL (mean 11.5 % SL) and with 12–16 scale rows. Eye diameter (4.3–9.4, mean 6.1 % SL) nearly equals snout length (4.5–8.6, mean 6.8 % SL). Eye with yellow iris and silvery line underneath, olive-green horizontal streak stretching from mouth to behind posterior edge of eye. Operculum with green vertical bar running down rear of preoperculum ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 and 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Mouth terminal, relatively short premaxilla (5.8–8.4, mean 7.2 % SL). Posterior end of maxilla reaches behind anterior edge of eye to right below centre of pupil. Preorbital region without scales. Teeth in single outer row, all incisor-shaped on both premaxilla and dentary (8–37 and 8–36, respectively). First gill arch with 3–5 (mean 4.2) gill rakers, externally, on upper part of arch and 11–15 (mean 12.5) on lower part of first arch, giving a total of 15–19 (mean 16.7) gill rakers. Dorsal fin with X–XI (mean 10.9) spines and 11–12 (mean 11.9) soft rays. Pectoral fins with 16–19 rays. Pelvic fins with I spine and 5 rays. Spinous part of dorsal fin low (sixth dorsal fin spine: 8.7–11.8, mean 10.9 % SL). Dorsal fin base relatively short (40.8–49.0, 45.8 % SL). Anal fin with III spines, and 11–12 (mean 11.0) soft rays, and soft-rayed part not raised (second anal fin ray length: 5.0–11.4, mean 9.7 % SL). Anal fin base shorter (16.9–20.6, mean 18.5 % SL) than head length. Pectoral fin silvery at base and dusky distally. Pectoral fin length longer (15.3–18.8, mean 17.4 % SL) than width of pectoral fin base (4.6–6.6, mean 5.6 % SL). Pelvic fin as long as pectoral fin (13.4–16.2, mean 15.2 % SL). Caudal fin forked with a notch that can be more or less pronounced (0.4–10.5, mean 6.1 % SL). Ten precaudal vertebrae and 16 caudal vertebrae, with 20–21 dorsal pterygiophores and 12 anal pterygiophores, with first anterior anal pterygiophore in eleventh interhaemal spine space, and only one dorsal pterygiophore in eighteenth dorsal interhaemal spine space. Maximum size: The largest specimen recorded is 457 mm SL, 515 mm TL (WAM P.20571), but specimens well in excess of 520 mm SL observed in the wild.

Colour of live specimens ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 and 4 View FIGURE 4 ).—Head and body silvery to bluish-grey (freshly dead specimens with obvious metallic blue colouration), operculum with olive-green vertical bar down rear edge of preoperculum, also with green horizontal streak stretching from mouth back to anterior groove of preoperculum. The body has horizontal rows of scales across the body with a faint greenish-yellowish shine ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 A and 3D); however, these rows are not obvious in underwater photos ( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Fins dusky to blackish, with pigment more pronounced towards edges of fins. Eye with yellow iris. Horizontal silvery line under eye. Green colouring surrounding orbit. Preserved specimens yellowish-brown, vertical bar on operculum and greenish horizontal scale rows disappears or becomes brown and faint in preservation (see Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 B, WAM P.30668-001).

Distribution. Kyphosus gladius sp. nov. appears restricted to Western Australia, and to date has been collected from the Houtman Abrolhos Islands southwards to Cape Naturaliste and down to Albany on the southern coast of Western Australia (28º29’– 35º00’S). Most western record is from Rockingham near Perth, and most easterly record from Albany (113º41’– 117º52’E) ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ). All reports involve depths from 0 to 15 m. It co-occurs with Kyphosus bigibbus , K. cornelii and K. sydneyanus . Examination of museum collections (WAM and AMS) and available underwater photographs suggest that K. gladius sp. nov. is yet to be recorded from South Australia, Victoria, Tasmania and the eastern coast of Australia. However, it is likely that the distribution might extend further eastward from Albany along the coast of the Great Australian Bight. The northernmost records are from a tissue sample and underwater photographs from the Wallabi Group in the Houtman Abrolhos Islands; whether the distribution extends further north is uncertain, although no specimens were observed during fieldwork on Ningaloo Reef. The most southern record is from Albany. The Houtman Abrolhos Islands represent the northern distribution limit for K. sydneyanus in Western Australia, and this may also be the case for K. gladius sp. nov. ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ).

Etymology. The specific name gladius was chosen as the shape of the body resembles the roman gladius sword, which is widest towards the point and tapers towards the hilt. The relatively elongate body and shallow caudal peduncle, along with the metallic-bluish colouration, resembles this roman sword. The genus name Kyphosus is masculine, hence gladius .

Comparison. Kyphosus gladius differs from the sympatric K. cornelii in having a lower number of soft dorsal fin rays (11–12 versus 14–16, respectively), and lacking a white edge to the caudal fin as in K. cornelii . Furthermore, K. gladius has interorbital scale rows (12–16), whereas interorbital scales are absent in K. cornelii .

Kyphosus gladius View in CoL differs from K. vaigiensis View in CoL and K. cinerascens View in CoL in having a lower total gill raker count (15–19 in K. gladius View in CoL versus 22–30 and 23–32 in K. cinerascens View in CoL and K. vaigiensis View in CoL , respectively) ( Sakai & Nakabo 1995, 2006). Furthermore, K. gladius View in CoL lacks the golden horizontal scale rows along the body seen in K. vaigiensis View in CoL , and K. gladius View in CoL lacks the high fourth dorsal soft ray (6.1–12.3 % SL in K. gladius View in CoL and 8.7–19.1 % SL in K. cinerascens View in CoL ), or the high second anal fin ray as in K. cinerascens View in CoL (5.0–11.4 % SL in K. gladius View in CoL and 10.2–22.3 % SL in K. cinerascens View in CoL ) ( Sakai & Nakabo 2006).

Kyphosus gladius View in CoL differs from K. pacificus View in CoL in having a lower total gill raker count (15–19 versus 20–26) ( Sakai & Nakabo 2004), and by only having one dorsal pterygiophore (two in K. pacificus View in CoL and in K. vaigiensis View in CoL ) in the eighteenth dorsal interhaemal spine space. Kyphosus gladius View in CoL has dusky dorsal, anal, and caudal fins whereas these fins are paler in K. cinerascens View in CoL , K. pacificus View in CoL and K. vaigiensis View in CoL . Kyphosus gladius View in CoL can resemble both K. bigibbus View in CoL and K. sydneyanus View in CoL in having a low gill raker count (18–21 in K. bigibbus View in CoL , 15–20 in K. sydneyanus View in CoL and 15–19 in K. gladius View in CoL ), but K. gladius View in CoL differs from K. bigibbus View in CoL in having a lower number of total scales in the lateral lineincluding those without pores—(55–63 in K. gladius View in CoL , and 61–76 in K. bigibbus View in CoL ), and in having a lower number of pored scales in the lateral line (44–55 in K. gladius View in CoL , and 51–60 in K. bigibbus View in CoL ). Kyphosus gladius View in CoL has the same arrangement of precaudal vertebrae and caudal vertebrae (10+16) as Kyphosus bigibbus View in CoL , which in both cases differs from the 11+15 precaudal- and caudal vertebrae seen in K. sydneyanus View in CoL . This difference in vertebrae means that the most anterior anal pterygiophore inserts in the space between the tenth and eleventh vertebrae in K. gladius View in CoL and K. bigibbus View in CoL , but inserts in the space between eleventh and the twelfth vertebrae in K. sydneyanus View in CoL . The anal fin base in K. gladius View in CoL is shorter than in K. bigibbus View in CoL (16.9–20.6 % SL in K. gladius View in CoL and 18.1–24. % SL in K. bigibbus View in CoL ), and K. gladius View in CoL has no dark countershading dorsally but is rather silvery-blue all over the body, whereas K. bigibbus View in CoL is darker or has a slight olive-green shading in the dorsal scales. The operculum in K. gladius View in CoL has a vertical olivegreen bar, which is lacking in K. bigibbus View in CoL . Kyphosus gladius View in CoL resembles K. sydneyanus View in CoL in having a low total gill raker count (15–19 in K. gladius View in CoL and 15–21 in K. sydneyanus View in CoL ). Kyphosus sydneyanus View in CoL is also silvery ( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 ) but has a tendency to have an olive-green countershading on the upper body ( Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 C and 4). Kyphosus sydneyanus View in CoL can be distinguished from K. gladius View in CoL underwater by being less elongate and lacking the green vertical bar on the operculum that is present in the latter species. Furthermore, the caudal peduncle depth in K. gladius View in CoL has a lower range than in K. sydneyanus View in CoL (9.9–11.8 % SL versus 12.1–15.5 % SL, respectively), and the body depth of K. gladius View in CoL is less than in K. sydneyanus View in CoL (33.3–41.6 % SL in K. gladius View in CoL and 38.8–52.0 % SL in K. sydneyanus View in CoL ). Furthermore, the frontal slope of the head in K. sydneyanus View in CoL is generally steeper than in K. gladius View in CoL , giving the latter a more elongate appearance.

Molecular comparison. Molecular mtDNA and nDNA markers from all 18 recently collected specimens of K. gladius View in CoL grouped together in a distinct clade distinct from all other species of Kyphosus View in CoL ( Figure 5 View FIGURE 5 and 7 View FIGURE 7 ). The molecular results from both mtDNA and nDNA indicate that the sister species of K. gladius View in CoL is the sympatric K. sydneyanus View in CoL ( Figure 5 View FIGURE 5 and 7 View FIGURE 7 ). Haplotypes of partial mtDNA cyt b are separated from K. sydneyanus View in CoL by seven mutations ( Figure 7 View FIGURE 7 ), and estimates of Φ ST (0.8338; P<0.001) from cyt b indicates a significant level of separation between K. sydneyanus View in CoL and K. gladius View in CoL .

In 10 specimens of K. sydneyanus that were examined by both molecular data and radiograph photos, all had the 11+15 arrangement of vertebrae and were grouped together by similarity in molecular markers. Likewise, for K. gladius View in CoL a similar pattern was observed, with specimens having 10+16 vertebrae clustering together in molecular variation. This pattern was consistent for the seven specimens of K. gladius View in CoL that were examined for both molecular markers and radiographs ( Figure 5 View FIGURE 5 and 7 View FIGURE 7 ).

TABLE 1. Counts and measurements of Kyphosus gladius View in CoL sp. nov., Kyphosus sydneyanus View in CoL and Kyphosus bigibbus View in CoL . Values in parentheses indicate mean and standard deviation.

Kyphosus gladius View in CoL sp. nov. Kyphosus sydneyanus View in CoL Kyphosus bigibbus View in CoL

Range of character, for Range of character, for Range of character, for

specimens examined, including specimens examined, including specimens examined, including holotype, paratypes and non holotype, paratypes and non holotype, paratypes and non type. n type. n type. n ……continued on the next page TABLE 1. (continued) Remarks. At Rottnest Island, where both K. gladius and K. sydneyanus were abundant, the two species were generally observed in discrete conspecific schools. The individuals in these schools became mixed when circling the observer, hence the heterospecific associations seen in Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 . In fact, at Rottnest Island, K. sydneyanus was observed more frequently with K. bigibbus than K. gladius . At the Wallabi Group in the Houtman Abrolhos Islands, where K. gladius appeared rare, individuals of this species were schooling with the much more common K. sydneyanus . The distribution of K. gladius is likely to extend further eastwards along the Great Australian Bight, however, without the ability to obtain further material from this coast, we are not able to shed further light on this. Underwater photographs of Kyphosus species from South Australia and Victoria supplied by Rudie Kuiter and obtained from web searches were all identified as K. sydneyanus . No significant meristic or morphometric sexual dimorphism was apparent in K. gladius , as is consistent with other species of Kyphosus ( Sakai & Nakabo 1995; 2004; 2006).

WAM

Western Australian Museum

NMV

Museum Victoria

SMNS

Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Kyphosidae

Genus

Kyphosus

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