Gymnoxenisthmus Gill, Bogorodsky & Mal, 2014

Gill, Anthony C., Bogorodsky, Sergey V. & Mal, Ahmad O., 2019, Description of a second species of Gymnoxenisthmus from the Red Sea (Teleostei: Gobioidei: Xenisthmidae), Zootaxa 4590 (1), pp. 177-183 : 177-178

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4590.1.8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:68AA0AEC-969C-49F7-A8D1-99D96A905471

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3512647

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1F20FB33-5604-FF98-FF1A-F88B73C251E4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gymnoxenisthmus Gill, Bogorodsky & Mal, 2014
status

 

Gymnoxenisthmus Gill, Bogorodsky & Mal, 2014 View in CoL

Gymnoxenisthmus Gill et al., 2014: 492 View in CoL View Cited Treatment (type species G. tigrellus Gill, Bogorodsky & Mal, 2014 View in CoL , by original designation and monotypy).

Diagnosis. The following combination of characters distinguishes Gymnoxenisthmus from other xenisthmid genera: head pores absent; scales lacking; first dorsal fin with five spines; second dorsal-fin rays I,13; most segmented dorsal- and anal-fin rays branched; pelvic fin with a spine and five unbranched rays.

Remarks. The discovery of Gymnoxenisthmus flavicinctus new species necessitates revision of the original diagnosis for the genus. Previously we listed the presence of branched pectoral-fin rays as a diagnostic character of the genus, but the new species has entirely unbranched pectoral-fin rays. Entirely unbranched pectoral-fin rays is one of several characters that we proposed as synapomorphies of a clade consisting of Tyson Springer (1983) , Rotuma Springer (1988) and Allomicrodesmus Schultz in Schultz et al. (1966) . The new species lacks the remaining proposed synapomorphies of this clade (all segmented second dorsal-fin rays unbranched; all segmented anal-fin rays unbranched; ceratohyals represented by a single ossification). This distribution of derived characters suggests that the new species should be placed in its own genus as sister-group to the Tyson + Rotuma + Allomicrodesmus clade. However, the general similarity in form and coloration suggests the two species are closely related. We are also reluctant to erect additional monotypic genera when the osteology of neither species has been adequately studied. We note, however, that synapomorphies linking the two species are lacking, and the possibility remains that the genus as recognised here is paraphyletic. Further testing must await the discovery of additional specimens for more detailed anatomical study.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Xenisthmidae

Loc

Gymnoxenisthmus Gill, Bogorodsky & Mal, 2014

Gill, Anthony C., Bogorodsky, Sergey V. & Mal, Ahmad O. 2019
2019
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