Bairdiella veraecrucis, Jordan & Dickerson, 1908

Marceniuk, Alexandre Pires, Molina, Eduardo Garcia, Caires, Rodrigo Antunes, Rotundo, Matheus Marcos, Wosiacki, Wolmar Benjamin & Oliveira, Claudio, 2019, Revision of Bairdiella (Sciaenidae: Perciformes) from the western South Atlantic, with insights into its diversity and biogeography, Neotropical Ichthyology 17 (1), pp. 1-18 : 14-15

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1590/1982-0224-20180024

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FAEBE302-376D-46C3-BB3C-6DA3A3530F53

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3664810

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B30607-FF95-F94D-56D2-F9946B74F834

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Bairdiella veraecrucis
status

 

Bairdiella veraecrucis Jordan & Dickerson, 1908

( Fig. 4d View Fig , Tables 4 View Tab , 5 View Tab )

Sciaena ronchus Jordan, 1886:44 View in CoL ( United States; listed).

Bairdiella veraecrucis Jordan, Dickerson, 1908:16, fig. 1 (Veracruz, Mexico. Holotype: USNM 61676 About USNM . Paratypes: CAS–SU 20654 View Materials ) .

Bairdiella ronchus View in CoL (not of Cuvier, 1830).– Jordan, Evermann, 1898: 1436 (in part; description; synonymy).– Castro-Aguirre et al., 1999:383 (fishes of Mexico; listed).– Nelson et al., 2004:146 (common names of fishes from the United States; listed).– McEachran, Fechhelm 2005:416 (fishes of the Gulf of Mexico; short description).– Page et al., 2013:151 (common and scientific names of fishes from the United States; listed).

Diagnosis. Bairdiella veraecruciscan be differentiated from B. armata (EP), which occurs between the Gulf of Califor- nia and Colombia (EP), by having 50-52 pored scales on the lateral line, rarely 49 (vs. 46-49, Tab. 5 View Tab ); from B. chrysoura , which is found between Cape Cod ( US) and the western Gulf of Mexico, by the presence of five pores on the chin (vs. six) and by a very robust second anal-fin spine, as long as the first anal-fin ray (vs. thin second anal-fin spine, shorter than first anal-fin ray, Fig. 4d View Fig ); from B. goeldi sp. nov., which is found on the Brazilian coast, by having an orbital diameter less than 8% SL (vs. more than 8% SL, Fig. 5a View Fig ), caudal pe- duncle length 2.8-3.7 times the orbital diameter (vs. 1.6-2.3, rarely more than 2.3, Fig. 5b View Fig ), and a relatively smaller head and longer dorsal fin ( Tab. 4 View Tab ), with dorsal fin length 1.2- 1.5 times the head length (vs. 1.7-2.4, Fig. 5c View Fig ), dorsal fin length and 1.2-1.5 times head depth (vs. 1.8-2.6, Fig. 5d View Fig ); from B. ensifera (EP), which is found between Mexico and Peru (EP), by having wavy stripes or spots on the flanks (vs. body silvery without stripes or spots, Fig. 4d View Fig ); from B. icistia (EP), which is found between the Gulf of California and Guatemala (EP), by having 22-24 rays on the dorsal fin (vs. 25-29, Tab. 5d View Tab ), 21-24 gill rakers on the first brachial arch (vs. 25-27, Tab. 4 View Tab ), and no dark spot at the base of pectoral fins (vs. with dark spot at base of pectoral fins); from B. ronchus (WA), which is found in the Greater Caribbean Central Province, by its relatively smaller head and longer dorsal fin ( Tab. 4 View Tab ), with dorsal fin length 1.2-1.5 times the head length (vs. 1.6-2.5, Fig. 5c View Fig ), and dorsal fin length 1.2-1.5 times the head depth (vs. 1.7-2.7, Fig. 5d View Fig ).

Molecular diagnosis. The haplotypes of B. veraecrucis differed by four bases from those of all the other Atlantic species analyzed, by nine bases from B. goeldi sp. nov., by 19 bases from B. ronchus , and by 97 bases from B. chrysoura ( Tab. 3 View Tab ), with genetic distances of 0.039±0.008 from B. goeldi sp. nov., 0.030±0.007 from B. ronchus , and 0.185±0.019 from B. chrysoura ( Tab. 2 View Tab ).

Description. Morphometric and meristic data are presen- ted in Tabs. 4 View Tab , 5. D. X View Tab +I.22-24; A.II.8; P. 16-18; gill rake- rs 21-24; pored lateral line scales 49-52; scale rows above lateral line 8-9, below 10-11. Body moderately long and compressed, maximum depth at origin of dorsal fin. Dorsal profile nearly straight, ascending until first dorsal fin origin, posteriorly slightly convex until caudal peduncle. Ventral profile straight from pelvic fin to anal fin. Head relatively short, low. Snout blunt in lateral view, dorsal profile naked. Mouth nearly terminal, oblique in lateral view; posterior tip of premaxilla reaching vertical through anterior margin of orbit. Teeth conical, premaxilla with two rows, external row with about 40 larger teeth; dentary with two rows, external row with about 35 larger teeth. Orbit lateral; eye round and relatively small, orbital diameter smaller than snout length. Interorbital space slightly convex, covered with cycloid scales. Nostrils visible with naked eye, anterior nostril oval, posterior nostril larger and teardrop like, close to anterior eye margin, over or nearly above horizontal line through middle of orbit. Lateral sensory canals on head visible on infraorbital, dentary and preopercle; five ventral pores on dentary tip, one small, central, oval, and two pores on each side. Preopercle margin serrated, with spines, two or three at angle largest. Opercle tip angled, slightly posterior to ver- tical through pectoral fin base. Gill rakers well developed. Scales ctenoid on trunk, belly, pectoral fin base and predor- sal region, cycloid on opercle, preopercle, infraorbital and interorbital. Lateral line simple, slightly arched below first dorsal fin to middle of second dorsal fin, straight elsewhere. First dorsal fin without scales, second dorsal fin with a row of cycloid scales on proximal half of membranes; membranes of anal fin covered by a row of cycloid scales, except at distal third; pectoral fin base covered by cycloid scales; caudal fin base covered by a cluster of small cycloid sca- les, rows of cycloid scales on nearly two thirds of caudal fin rays. Spinous dorsal fin short, first spine shortest, third spine longest; small notch between first and second dorsal fin; ori- gin of second dorsal fin slightly in front of vertical through pectoral tip, with second dorsal soft ray about the same len- gth of longest first dorsal spine. Anal fin short, emarginated (more prominently in small specimens), first spine as long and slightly stouter than last spine of first dorsal, second anal spine very stout and longer than remaining spines, width ne- arly two thirds of pupil diameter. Pectoral fin long, falcate, almost reaching vent; pelvic fin origin behind vertical thou- gh pectoral fin base; first pelvic fin longest, reaching vent. ±Caudal peduncle depth slightly larger than eye diameter, 8.7-10.8% SL, length 20.0-21.9% SL; caudal fin slightly rhomboidal, central rays longest.

Coloration. Grayish sections near the dorsal fin, but mostly silver above lateral line, silver below lateral line, tenuous bands of pigment on the flanks, oblique over lateral line and more or less parallel ventral to it. Distal portion of dorsal, anal and caudal fins black, pelvic fin yellowish and base of pectoral fin yellowish.

Distribution and habitat. Northern Greater Caribbean Province, Gulf of Mexico ( Fig. 3 View Fig ).

Material examined. CNPE 720 , 1, 236 mm SL, Mexico, Tabasco, Laguna La Redonda ; CNPE 2455 , 1, 152 mm SL, Mexico, Tamaulipas, Rio Soto la Marina , Vista Hermosa ; CNPE 1125 , 1, 173 mm SL, Mexico, Veracruz de Ignacio, Laguna de Tamiahua ; CNPE 4817 , 3 , 130- 168 mm SL, Mexico, Veracruz de Ignacio, Laguna de Tampamachoco ; CNPE 4882 , 2 , 155- 176 mm SL, Mexico, Veracruz de Ignacio, Laguna de Tampamachoco ; CNPE 11083 , 2 , 125- 130 mm SL, Mexico, Veracruz de Ignacio, Laguna de Tamiahua ; USNM 61676 About USNM , 1, 201 mm SL, Mexico, Veracruz, Jordan, D. S (Holotype) ; USNM 62275 About USNM , 1, 234 mm SL, Mexico, Tampico .

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

CAS–SU

California Academy of Sciences, Stanford University Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Sciaenidae

Genus

Bairdiella

Loc

Bairdiella veraecrucis

Marceniuk, Alexandre Pires, Molina, Eduardo Garcia, Caires, Rodrigo Antunes, Rotundo, Matheus Marcos, Wosiacki, Wolmar Benjamin & Oliveira, Claudio 2019
2019
Loc

Sciaena ronchus

Jordan , 1886:44
Loc

Bairdiella veraecrucis

Jordan , Dickerson, 1908:16
Loc

Bairdiella ronchus

Jordan , Evermann, 1898: 1436
Castro-Aguirre et al., 1999:383
Nelson et al., 2004:146
Fechhelm 2005:416
Page et al., 2013:151
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