Upeneus pori Ben-Tuvia et Golani, 1989
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/aiep.53.103343 |
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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5D4335AE-6435-4186-870C-630DA13704ED |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1E00096A-F5A6-5FEF-8481-4326F88F2760 |
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Upeneus pori Ben-Tuvia et Golani, 1989 |
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Upeneus pori Ben-Tuvia et Golani, 1989 View in CoL View at ENA
(Figs 2 View Figure 2 and 3 View Figure 3
Morphological characteristics.
The morphometric measurements are shown in Table 2 View Table 2 . Head medium, obtuse, and conical; body laterally compressed and elongated; maxilla slightly longer than the mandible; cordiform teeth present in both jaws, palatine, and vomer; single complete lateral-line on each body side; snout slightly inferior; body with rhomboidal ctenoid scales; two separate dorsal-fins; two barbels on the chin; upper lobe of the caudal fin larger than the lower lobe.
Color.
Mainly based on recently deceased specimens (Fig. 2A View Figure 2 ). Dorsally darkened, head and sides reddish-brown, belly whitish; mid-lateral body with faint brownish-red bar running from snout to base of caudal fin in fresh fish; barbels white or creamy white; first and second dorsal-fins with 3-4 sets of reddish-brown spots running horizontally; pectoral fins cream-colored to transparent; pelvic fins creamy-white and base of fins with several yellow marks; anal fin rays whitish with transparent membranes; upper lobe of caudal fin with 4-5 oblique reddish-brown stripes intersecting rays; middle part of lower lobe of caudal fin with wide reddish-brown band extending from base of caudal fin to tip of lower lobe; 3-4 red-brown stripes above wide band; 6-7 stripes with same color below wide band and all stripes approximately perpendicular to wide band; fluorescent yellow spots between stripes on both lobes of caudal fin, sometimes vague (Figs 2C View Figure 2 and 2D View Figure 2 ). The preserved specimens are dorsally dark-brown; all fins retain original spots, bars, or stripes; mid-lateral sides with faint dark grey bar (Fig. 2B View Figure 2 ).
Sequence analysis of the COI gene.
The mean sequence of some mitochondrial cytochrome C oxidase (COI) genes, collected from fish specimens examined in the presently reported study, was 690 nucleotide sites. The base frequencies of A, C, T, and G of twenty COI sequences were 22.2%, 29.4%, 29.4%, and 19.0%, respectively and the A + T content (51.6%) was greater than the C + G content (48.4%). The intraspecific genetic distance ranged from 0% to 1.58% and the interspecific genetic distance ranged from 8.87% to 19.36% (Table 3 View Table 3 ). The interspecific genetic distance was much greater than the intraspecific genetic distance. According to the results of the maximum likelihood tree (Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ), Upeneus sulphureus , U. subvittatus , U. quadrilineatus , U. moluccensis , U. japonicus , and U. tragula clustered and separated from U. pori with high bootstrap values and SH-aLRT values, respectively, indicating significant differentiation amongst them, of which the sequences in this study (GOU103676, GOU103678, GOU104100, and GOU104102) were clustered with the sequences (KM538630, LC572156, KY176690, and KF564319) distinguished as U. pori in the Red Sea area from GenBank with high SH-aLRT and ultrafast bootstrap values (97/99). The genetic distance (Table 4 View Table 4 ) shows that the U. pori collected in the South China Sea and the U. pori from the Red Sea belong to the species range.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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