Tetragonurus pacificus Abe 1953
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4702.1.7 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:63C3D092-F2A6-494A-81BD-02AB54EEAC39 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/21713463-FFFA-EF1F-FF75-B147350CFF6E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Tetragonurus pacificus Abe 1953 |
status |
|
Tetragonurus pacificus Abe 1953 View in CoL
Figures 1–2 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 ; table 1
Tetragonurus pacificus Abe 1953: 45 View in CoL , figs. 5–6 (west of Solomon Islands); Grey 1955: 14, fig. 7; Headrich 1967: 98; Ahlstrom 1976: 333, fig. 14; Headrich 1986: 851; Last 2001: 3785; Parin & Piotrovsky 2004: S56.
Material examined. NMMB-P29945 , 96.2 mm SL, off Dong-gang (ca. 22°39ʹN, 120°24ʹE), Pingtung, Taiwan, South China Sea, 5 July 2018, mid-water trawl, obtained at fish-landing ground at Dong-gang, collected by K. Koeda and A. Teramura GoogleMaps ; ZUMT 47823, 122.5 mm SL, west of Solomon Islands (ca. 6°36ʹS, 152°29ʹE), obtained from stomach of yellowfin tuna, 30 December 1952, collected by research vessel “Fusa-maru” GoogleMaps ; ZUMT 48781 View Materials , 48.4 mm SL, southwest of Tarawa ( Kiribati) (ca. 3°18ʹS, 171°12ʹE), 30 March 1956 GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis. A species of Tetragonurus with 40 vertebrae; 10‒11 spines on first dorsal fin; 72‒80 longitudinal scale rows along body axis; and following combination of characters: anal fin with 1 spine and 10–11 soft rays; predorsal scales 17–20; head length 26.1–28.6% SL; orbit diameter 7.3–8.9% SL; and longest pectoral-fin ray length 14.3–15.5% SL.
Description. Counts and measurements are given in Table 1 View TABLE 1 .
Body elongate, compressed; caudal peduncle long, shallow, its length ca. 5 times its depth, square shape in cross section. Snout blunt. Dorsal surface of head weakly keeled. Eye rounded, its diameter slightly shorter than snout. Dorsal surface of interorbital space slightly convex. Posterior nostril slit-like, located midway between uppermost point of eye and snout tip; anterior nostril oblong, located midway between posterior nostril and snout tip. Mouth moderately large, slightly oblique; posterior margin of maxilla reaching a vertical through middle of orbit. Lower jaw completely covered by upper jaw; anterior tip of upper jaw projecting anteriorly beyond lower jaw when mouth open. Teeth on upper jaw conical, uniserial. Teeth on lower jaw large, flattened with curved tips, adhering to each other, gradually taller posteriorly (arranged V-shaped in profile when viewed anteriorly). Palatines and vomer with tiny inwardly directed conical teeth. Posteroventral corner of preopercle with serrations.
Lateral line indistinct, from uppermost point of gill opening, weakly arched following dorsal outline of body and reaching caudal peduncle, but not caudal-fin base. Posterior part of caudal peduncle with two prominent longitudinal keels, their length equal to caudal peduncle depth. Body and head fully scaled by strongly adherent scales, except for lips; scales on body facing posteroventrally, each with a prominent longitudinal ridge.
Origin of first dorsal fin slightly posterior to pectoral-fin bases; second or third dorsal-fin spine longest, spine length thereafter gradually shorter posteriorly; base of last dorsal-fin spine closer to base of first dorsal-fin soft ray (unbranched) than penultimate dorsal-fin spine. Second dorsal fin taller than first; base of second dorsal fin shorter than first. Third dorsal-fin ray longest in second dorsal fin. Origin of anal fin posterior to origin of second dorsal fin; end of anal-fin base posterior to end of dorsal-fin base. Pectoral fins pointed, posterior tip reaching a vertical through base of fifth dorsal-fin spine. Origin of pelvic fin at above same vertical beneath middle of pectoral-fin base. Caudal fin forked, both lobes pointed.
Color when fresh. Body blackish-grey with greenish reflection on lateral body axis and yellowish reflection on ventral region. Head black with silver to gold reflection on cheek and operculum; dorsal surface of head, snout and lower jaw solid black. Dorsal, anal, pelvic, and caudal fins blackish-grey, membranes paler; pectoral fin black.
Color when preserved. Body blackish-brown anteriorly, light brown posteriorly. Head black. All fins blackishbrown.
*counted/measured on right side. **counts of right side in parentheses
Distribution. Tetragonurus pacificus is currently known from scattered localities in subtropical region of Indo- Pacific as follows: Sumatra to the Seychelles, in the West Australian Basin, and above the Equator Seamount, in the Indian Ocean ( Grey, 1955; Parin & Piotrovsky 2004), and west of the Solomon Islands in the Western Pacific Ocean ( Abe 1953), north of Samoa and the Hawaiian Islands in the central Pacific Ocean ( Grey, 1955; Ahlstrom et al. 1976), and from a mid-oceanic station (3°47ʹN, 118°30ʹW) in the eastern Pacific Ocean ( Ahlstrom et al. 1976); and the two additional specimens represent new records of Taiwan and Tarawa ( Kiribati).
Remarks. The two new specimens agree well with most morphological features of the holotype of T. pacificus ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), except for the counts of teeth on both jaws and gill rakers varied in the three specimens ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ), such variations may infer the ontogenetic change. In addition, some of the morphometric features are also different among the three specimens, although these differences may reflect ontogenetic growth, individual variations, and/or condition of the specimens ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ).
Tetragonurus pacificus is unique from the two congeners, T. atlanticus and T. cuvieri , in having fewer counts in following meristic characters: 40 (39–43 in Parin & Piotrovsky 2004) vertebrae (vs. 44–51 in T. atlanticus and 52–58 in T. cuvieri , respectively), 10–11 (9–12) first dorsal-fin spines (vs. 13–17 and 16–21, respectively), and 72–80 longitudinal scale rows along body axis (vs. 93–95 and 97–114, respectively). Although the two congeners, are distributed circumglobally, mainly in the subtropical zone, both species are also known from the high latitude region of Pacific Ocean, e.g. off Hokkaido, northern Japan ( Nakabo & Doiuchi 2013). On the other hand, T. pacificus is only known from the subtropical zone in the Indian and Pacific oceans. The Taiwanese specimen represents the northernmost distributional record (ca. 5,000 km northwestward range extension in the western Pacific Ocean) for the species.
ZUMT 47823 | NMMB-P29945 | ZUMT 48781 | |
---|---|---|---|
Holotype | Non-type | Non-type | |
W of Solomon Is. | Taiwan | SW of Tarawa | |
Standard length (mm; SL) | 122.5 | 96.2 | 48.4 |
Counts | |||
Dorsal-fin rays | X, 12 | XI, 11 | X, 13 |
Anal-fin rays | I, 10 | I, 10 | I, 11 |
Pectoral-fin rays | 16 | 16 | 16 |
Pelvic-fin rays | I, 5 | I, 5 | I, 5 |
Principal caudal-fin rays | damaged | 9 + 8 | 9 + 8 |
Second caudal-fin rays (procurrent rays) | damaged | 11 + 12 | damaged + 10 |
...Continued on next page
ZUMT |
Department of Zoology, University Museum |
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Tetragonurus pacificus Abe 1953
Koeda, Keita & Teramura, Akinori 2019 |
Tetragonurus pacificus
Last, P. 2001: 3785 |
Ahlstrom, E. H. & Butler, J. L. & Sumida, B. Y. 1976: 333 |
Grey, M. 1955: 14 |
Abe, T. 1953: 45 |