A review of the species in the Apogon fasciatus group with a description of a new species of cardinalfish from the Indo-West Pacific (Perciformes: Apogonidae).
Author
Thomas H. Fraser
text
Zootaxa
2005
924
1
30
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CB0C476E-97D7-4831-9C5D-2406489FDCE5
journal article
z00924p001
CB0C476E-97D7-4831-9C5D-2406489FDCE5
[[
Apogon fasciatus
species group ]]
Color patterns similarities in the large genus
Apogon
are used to group various species into smaller phenetic groups which may prove to be monophyletic through additional character analysis. General habitat fidelity may provide another clue to relationships. The
Apogon
fasciatus
species grouping as proposed here, has a common basis in general color pattern, a mid-lateral dark stripe from the snout to tip of the caudal fin, no dark stripes below the mid-lateral stripe, no dark spots on head or body and black stomachs. First-dorsal spines are VI and VII in this group. These species generally have a coastal shelf (continental-like) distribution, preferring sandy or muddy bottoms of deeper tropical waters or shallow warm-temperate waters. The presence of an unidentified species, often identified as
Apogon fasciatus
or
A. quadrifasciatus
, resulted in a preliminary examination of the group by the author and Ernest A. Lachner in 1974. A review of that information during the past several years confirmed the initial conclusion about the existence of an undescribed species. The purpose of this report is to describe the new species, review the status of nominal species and provide a detailed examination of the gill raker variation among the valid species and geographically within
Apogon fasciatus
.
White (1790) briefly described the first species,
Mullus fasciatus
, in this complex from southeastern Australia, but either failed to preserve the specimen or it was lost with time. The original illustration clearly showed two dark stripes along the body. Lachner (1953: 439, Pl 35A), in a footnote of a key to the species of
Apogon
, created a neotype from the type locality, Port Jackson, Australia because no types were available. The neotype was not described in Lachner’s text, but the footnote refers to the previous description and figure of the same specimen by Radcliffe (1911) along with a copy of the figure from White (1790). Radcliffe (1911) did not report any gill raker counts which was partially rectified by Lachner (1953: tab. 39 & 40). Randall and Lachner (1986) recounted this history without discussing
Apogon quadrifasciatus
. Randall and Hoese (1988) noted that the specimen used by Lachner can be identified with
Apogon quadrifasciatus
, a wide-ranging Indo-West Pacific species, and provided a table comparison of gill-raker counts for four species. The comparative material was not listed. Kuiter (1993) and Kuiter and Kozawa (1999) suggested that
Apogon fasciatus
is restricted to eastern Australia and that
Apogon quadrifasciatus
is more widespread in the Indian Ocean, but not reaching past Bali, Indonesia. Gon and Randall (2003) agreed with Kuiter (1993) reversing Randall and Hoese’s previous conclusion about a different species in eastern Australia, based on postocular stripe characteristics.
Quoy and Gaimard (1825) described
Apogon fasciatus
from Guam, a preoccupied name as a secondary homonym, the result of White’s earlier name. Weber and de Beaufort (1929) listed Quoy and Gaimard’s name under
Apogon novemfasciatus Cuvier in Cuvier and Valeniecnnes, 1828
. According to Randall and Lachner (1986) Quoy and Gaimard’s holotype is
Apogon novemfasciatus
. My examination of these types leads to the same conclusion.
Cuvier in Cuvier & Valenciennes (1828) described
Apogon quadrifasciatus
from a single specimen taken at Pondichery, India. Comparing his specimen with the description of
Apogon fasciatus (White)
, Cuvier concluded that differences existed. Weber and de Beaufort (1929:300) listed
Mullus fasciatus
as a questionable name with priority.
Guenther
(1880) briefly described two species,
Apogon monogramma
and
Apogon septemstriatus
from the Arafura Sea and provided figures (Pl. XVI, figs A & B). No comparisons were made with previously described species. Weber and de Beaufort (1929:300) listed
Apogon monogramma
as a synonym of
Apogon quadrifasciatus
.
Fowler (1904) described
Apogon evanidus
from Padang, Sumatra, Indonesia based on two specimens. He compared this species with
Apogon fraenatus
, a species in another subgenus. Weber and de Beaufort (1929:300) listed
Apogon evanidus
as a questionable synonym of
Apogon quadrifasciatus
.
Jordan & Snyder (1901) described
Apogon kiensis
from Wakanoura Kii, Japan. No species comparisons were made. Weber and de Beaufort (1929:302) contrasted the number of first dorsal spines in this species and
Apogon quadrifasciatus
.
Jordan & Seale (1905) described
Amia elizabethae
from Hong Kong, China. No species comparisons were made. Jordan and Richardson (1909) noted that
A. elizabethae
was very close to
A. quadrifasciata
. Fowler (1937) synonomized
Amia elizabethae
with
Amia quadrifasciata
.
Regan (1908) described
Apogon quinquestriatus
from South Nilandu, Maldive Islands. He related this species to
Apogon quadrifasciatus
and
A. septemstriatus
. No other material has been reported.
McCulloch (1915) created new name combinations in
Amia
based on White’s name treating one new subspecies and three other color forms as polychromic subspecies:
Amia fasciata fasciata
,
A. f. aroubiensis
,
A. f. compressa
,
A. f. novemfasciata
, and
A. f. stevensi
. None of the subspecies combinations has survived as useful taxa. McCulloch listed
Apogon monogramma
and
Apogon kiensis
as synonyms of
Amia quadrifasciata
.
Fowler and Bean (1930) listed
Apogon monogramma
,
Amia elizabethae
and
Apogon quinquestriatus
as synonyms of
Amia quadrifasciata
. The species they treated as
Amia fasciata
was a combination of other dark-striped species.
Apogon kiensis
was treated as a separate species described with VII first-dorsal spines instead of VI and was misidentified.
J.L.B. Smith (1961) was the first to report on specimens, identified as
Apogon kiensis
(=
Apogon bryx
), from various locations in the Indian Ocean (Red Sea and Mozambique). All other prior reports he mentioned, Jordan & Snyder (1901), Seale (1914) and Fowler & Bean (1930), were from Japan, China and the Philippines. Some of these reports were based on a VII spined species, identified as as
Apogon quadrifasciatus
or
A. fasciatus
, either due to trawl damaged first spine or overlooking the tiny first dorsal spine. Data presented here from examination of the type material of
Apogon kiensis
from Japan and material reported by Smith (1961) revealed gill raker count and slight pectoral-fin ray differences of a then undescribed species.
Fraser (1998) described
Apogon bryx
from Balayan Bay, Luzon Island Philippines from one specimen taken in 145-155 m. He compared this species with other VI spined species and concluded that
A. bryx
was related to a possible new species from the western Indian Ocean and to
A. kiensis
. Data presented here shows that
Apogon kiensis
is restricted
to
the East China Sea and Japan, while
Apogon bryx
is widespread from the Red Sea (see Gon and Randall, 2003) to Taiwan and the Philippines.