Marcusenius angolensis ( Boulenger, 1905 )

Kramer, Bernd & Wink, Michael, 2013, East-west differentiation in the Marcusenius macrolepidotus species complex in Southern Africa: the description of a new species for the lower Cunene River, Namibia (Teleostei: Mormyridae), Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) 47 (35 - 36), pp. 2327-2362 : 2338

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2013.798699

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8FE68494-9ED9-428E-B181-E814D25493F2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/344487B2-FFC6-FFAE-5F87-FE8CFE55FCA5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Marcusenius angolensis ( Boulenger, 1905 )
status

 

Marcusenius angolensis ( Boulenger, 1905) View in CoL

( Figure 4B View Figure 4 )

Gnathonemus angolensis Boulenger, 1905, p. 458 View in CoL . Origin, Quanza River, Angola.

Gnathonemus macrolepidotus angolensis: Poll and Gosse 1963, p. 93 View in CoL .

Marcusenius angolensis: Taverne 1971a, p. 103 View in CoL ; Taverne 1971 b, p. 134; Taverne 1972, p. 166.

Marcusenius macrolepidotus angolensis: Gosse 1984, p. 86 View in CoL . “Distribution: Angola ( Zaïre basin and Upper Zambezi), Zaïre, (Upper basin).” In consequence, Skelton et al. (1985) state that Marcusenius macrolepidotus angolensis View in CoL applies to the Upper Zambezi form.

Marcusenius angolensis: Kramer et al. 2007, p. 680 View in CoL View Cited Treatment –681.

Type specimens

Holotype (unique): BMNH 1905.5 .29.64, examined.

Non-types, examined:

USNM 042332 View Materials Marcusenius macrolepidotus angolensis , 4 specimens, “pond near Cunga, Angola, Africa”, coll: Brown, W.H., 25 December 1889, assuming this location refers to the one Cunga that is associated with the Quanza, near Malanga in the Lower Quanza region , at 9 ◦ 25’29” S, 16 ◦ 21’19” E. ( There are at least four more Cungas in Angola that are associated with the Cunene (in the southwest), the Cuito or the Kwando (southeast), a tributary of the Lower Congo (northwest), and an independent coastal stream discharging into the Atlantic south of the Congo mouth, northwest GoogleMaps ).

USNM 042357 View Materials Marcusenius macrolepidotus angolensis , three specimens, “Quanza R., Angola ”, coll: Brown, W.H., “no tag in jar, no entry in date field of ledger, if locality is correct, date probably Dec. 1889 ” .

ZSM 20948–949 View Materials , Gnathonemus angolensis Blgr 1905 , two specimens, “ Cuanza / Angola, SW-Afrika, III.1957, leg. Schoenfeldt, det. Terofal ” .

BMNH 1907.6.29.231–233, Gnathonemus angolensis Blgr 1905 , three specimens, “Cunene, Mossamedes”, purchased Dr W. Ansorge. Mossamedes refers to the district of Mossamedes, then Angola’s southernmost district bordering Namibia (Stieler’s Hand-Atlas, 1910) .

Type locality

Angola: Quanza River (no. 2, Figure 1 View Figure 1 ).

The former subspecies M. macrolepidotus angolensis ( Poll and Gosse, 1963) refers to the single specimen of G. angolensis Boulenger 1905 from the Quanza River in Angola (no more specific origin than the Lower Quanza is indicated by Boulenger 1910). The fishes (i.e., fish species) of the upper Quanza appear to be related to the fishes of the Zambezi basin and to the Cunene ( Trewavas 1973; P. Skelton 1994). Headwaters of both river systems arise just northeast of the city of Huambo on the Plateau of Bié, less than 20 km apart (the Cutato for the Quanza; Operational Navigation Chart, ONC N-3, 1: 1,000,000). Huambo is at an altitude of 1700 m, and both rivers flow in opposite directions. The type specimen, whose origin Boulenger (1905) gives only as “Quanza River, Angola ”, originates from the distant and tropical Lower Quanza, as concluded from the geographical detail given by J.W. Ansorge in Boulenger (1910). “The Lower Quanza ecoregion is considered its own distinct bioregion because the Zambezian fauna is absent or poorly represented, and a number of endemic species have been described” ( Thieme et al. 2005, p. 303). Seven specimens from USNM are also given as originating from the Quanza River, however, it is not clear from which section of this river, of which by far the longest section lies in the mountains, with many rapids and waterfalls. Two specimens from ZSM are listed as originating from the Quanza River (without further detail), however, this information could be incorrect (D. Neumann, personal communication). From the report by Hellmich (1957) and additional information at ZSM these specimens could originate from close to Ganda (13 ◦ 00 ′ 30 ′′ S, 14 ◦ 37 ′ 25 ′′ E), which lies on a small coastal system between Huambo and Benguela (the Jamba, a tributary of the Cubal). For comparison, the anatomical measures of these nine specimens are also given in Table A1 (in Appendix A) but cannot be used for taxonomic decisions unless their origin is known with greater precision.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

ZSM

Bavarian State Collection of Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Osteoglossiformes

Family

Mormyridae

Genus

Marcusenius

Loc

Marcusenius angolensis ( Boulenger, 1905 )

Kramer, Bernd & Wink, Michael 2013
2013
Loc

Marcusenius macrolepidotus angolensis: Gosse 1984 , p. 86

Gosse J-P 1984: 86
1984
Loc

Marcusenius angolensis:

Taverne L 1972: 166
Taverne L 1971: 103
Taverne L 1971: 134
1971
Loc

Gnathonemus macrolepidotus angolensis:

Poll M & Gosse J-P 1963: 93
1963
Loc

Gnathonemus angolensis

Boulenger GA 1905: 458
1905
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