Apogon, Lacepede, 1801

Van Hinsbergh, Victor W. M. & Helwerda, Renate A., 2019, Fish Otoliths from the Cabarruyan Piacenzian-Gelasian fauna found in the Philippines, Zootaxa 4563 (3), pp. 401-443 : 425

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4563.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B0A3408F-563A-4DD3-94A4-284A2770B0A6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5937061

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C5011D20-FFC3-FFE1-FF01-FE4BC526A8A3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Apogon
status

 

Apogon View in CoL View at ENA sp.

(Figures 77–81)

Material: 22 specimens in total. Anda1 (1) RGM 962254; Anda2 (4) RGM 962255 View Materials , RGM 962256 View Materials ; Anda3 (3) RGM 962258 View Materials ; Anda4 (5) RGM 962259 View Materials ; AndaDeVos (1) RGM 962260 View Materials ; Roxas (7) RGM 962261 View Materials , RGM 962262 View Materials , RGM 962263 View Materials , RGM 962333 View Materials ; Tiep2 (1) RGM 962264 View Materials .

Four juvenile (OL:OH= 1.49–1.56) and one larger specimen (OL:OH= 1.41) are depicted. Ventral rim regularly bent; in the more adult specimen the anterior part of the ventral rim is more strongly bent than the posterior part. Dorsal rim irregular with undulations and a predorsal angle; in the juvenile specimens a middorsal angle dominates. The ventral part of the inner surface is convex, the dorsal part makes a more flat impression, also due to the distinct round-oval dorsal depression. The sulcus is wide and large, the straight cauda is more narrow and shorter than the ostium. A distinct crista inferior aligns the cauda, but not the ostium. A small but clear dorsal depression is present above the collum. An insignificant ventral furrow is observed in the juvenile specimens, while the more adult specimen is too eroded for proper evaluation of this aspect. The ornamentation of the outer surface varies between specimens from almost smooth via a few anterior lobes to fully decorated with knobs and furrows along the dorsal and ventral rim (in the smallest specimen).

Overall, the specimens belong to Apogon or its related genus Fowleria , but it is not possible to decide whether this presents a rather variable species of Apogon or whether two groups have to be discriminated. Species identification requires better preserved adult specimens.

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