Gymnothorax angusticauda ( Weber & de Beaufort 1916 )

Smith, David G., Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Mal, Ahmad O. & Alpermann, Tilman J., 2019, Review of the moray eels (Anguilliformes: Muraenidae) of the Red Sea, with description of a new species, Zootaxa 4704 (1), pp. 1-87 : 17-18

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4704.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0AF043C6-38E4-4546-A7FB-C43BAC5A9837

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5933451

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A84F87BC-FF91-6936-FF5A-FA7DFE39FBCF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gymnothorax angusticauda ( Weber & de Beaufort 1916 )
status

 

Gymnothorax angusticauda ( Weber & de Beaufort 1916) View in CoL —Shorttail Moray

( Figure 8 View FIGURE 8 )

Muraena (Priodonophis) angusticauda Weber & de Beaufort 1916: 389 View in CoL , fig. 388 (Near Supiori, Schouten Is., Papua New Guinea). Holotype (unique), ZMA 102162.

Gymnothorax angusticauda: Randall & Golani 1995: 854 View in CoL , Pl. 1a; Golani & Bogorodsky 2010: 10; Bogorodsky et al. 2014: 411 View Cited Treatment ; Golani & Fricke 2018: 20.

Red Sea material. Egypt: BPBM 19844 View Materials (2, 458–503), Nuweiba. Saudi Arabia: SMF 34962 [ KAU12-731 ] (1, 383), Jizan .

Comparative material. Taiwan: USNM 438183 View Materials (1, 486) ; USNM 438650 View Materials (1, 547) ; USNM 439078 View Materials (1, 513) . Philippines: USNM 408880 View Materials (1, 560) . Papua New Guinea: ZMA 102.062 View Materials (1, 474, holotype).

Description. In TL: preanal length 1.9–2.2, predorsal length 11–13, head length 8.0–9.8, body depth at anus 25–34. In head length: snout length 5.3–7.1, eye diameter 8.8–11, upper-jaw length 2.8–3.5. Pores: LL 2, SO 3, IO 4, POM 6. Vertebrae: predorsal 4, preanal 58–70, total 143–152.

Body moderately elongate; anus near mid-length; dorsal fin begins slightly before gill opening; tail relatively slender. Head and jaws moderate, jaws closing completely. Eye well developed, at about midpoint of upper jaw. Gill opening nearly horizontal, midlateral. Anterior nostril tubular, reaches edge of lip when depressed; posterior nostril oval, with a slightly raised rim, over anterior part of eye.

Teeth conical to narrowly triangular, finely serrate on posterior edge. Upper jaw with about 5 or 6 peripheral intermaxillary teeth, narrowly triangular, retrorse; 0–3 median teeth, conical. Maxillary teeth uniserial, about 7–14, similar in shape to intermaxillary teeth. Dentary teeth uniserial, similar in shape to those in upper jaw, with about 7–19 teeth on each side. Vomer with about 3–6 teeth in a single row.

Color: medium to light brown or tan, snout and lower jaw darker, abdomen sometimes white; head pores in conspicuous white spots, nostrils white; fins with narrow pale edge; iris yellow.

Of the ten known specimens, the largest is 560 mm.

Distribution and habitat. Known from the Red Sea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia (Bali and Sulawesi), and Papua New Guinea. The two larger specimens from the Red Sea were collected in less than 0.5 m from the fringing reef at Nuweiba. The smaller specimen was captured in a trawl at about 30 m from the southern Saudi Arabia, off Jizan, from a sandy area close to the island. Information on depth and habitat is not available for the Philippine and Indonesian specimens. Fricke (2015) reported an additional specimen collected from a depth of 15 m from Madang, Papua New Guinea.

Remarks. The smallest trawled Red Sea specimen differs from all the other specimens in having the anus slightly behind midlength rather than slightly before. It also has more total vertebrae (152 vs. 143–148) and distinctly more preanal vertebrae (70 vs. 58–60). The other two Red Sea specimens do not differ in these characters from the western Pacific specimens. With the limited material available and without genetic information from other parts of the distribution area, we cannot assess the significance of these distinctions. In the COI-based phylogeny, the species is most closely related to Gymnothorax albimarginatus (Temminck & Schlegel) and an unidentified Gymnothorax species ( Gymnothorax sp. 4, BOLD voucher of SBF244-11 collected from Madagascar), with which it forms a well-supported clade.

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Anguilliformes

Family

Muraenidae

Genus

Gymnothorax

Loc

Gymnothorax angusticauda ( Weber & de Beaufort 1916 )

Smith, David G., Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Mal, Ahmad O. & Alpermann, Tilman J. 2019
2019
Loc

Gymnothorax angusticauda: Randall & Golani 1995: 854

Golani, D. & Fricke, R. 2018: 20
Bogorodsky, S. V. & Alpermann, T. J. & Mal, A. O. & Gabr, M. H. 2014: 411
Golani, D. & Bogorodsky, S. V. 2010: 10
Randall, J. E. & Golani, D. 1995: 854
1995
Loc

Muraena (Priodonophis) angusticauda

Weber, M. & de Beaufort, L. F. 1916: 389
1916
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