Atelomycterus Garman
publication ID |
z01520p019 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F450596E-D228-4280-9E49-256729F96E1C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6245745 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3D5FD896-1087-B376-213D-63E13C9CAC63 |
treatment provided by |
Thomas |
scientific name |
Atelomycterus Garman |
status |
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[[ Atelomycterus Garman View in CoL View at ENA ZBK ]]
The genus Atelomycterus ZBK was originally proposed by Garman (1913) for the scyliorhinid species Scyllium marmoratum Bennett 1830 ZBK (Compagno & Stevens, 1993). Since its inception, three additional species; A. macleayi Whitley, 1939 ZBK , A. fasciatus Compagno & Stevens, 1993 ZBK and A. baliensis White, Last & Dharmadi, 2005 ZBK , have all been incorporated into this genus. Atelomycterus marmoratus (Bennett, 1830) has the widest recorded geographical range of the four species, and is found throughout the Indo-West Pacific region from India and Pakistan, through to Vietnam, Philippines and New Guinea (Compagno & Stevens, 1993; White et al., 2005). Closely related to A. marmoratus , A. baliensis ZBK , was described from samples obtained through market surveys of eastern Indonesia (Jimbaran Bay, Bali) (White et al., 2005). The remaining two atelomycterine catshark species, A. macleayi ZBK and A. fasciatus ZBK , are Australian endemics. Atelomycterus macleayi ZBK was first described by Whitley (1939) from Queensland, the Northern Territory and Western Australia. In comparison, A. fasciatus ZBK is a common benthic elasmobranch found on the offshore continental shelf of north-western Australia (Last & Stevens, 1994). Single A. fasciatus ZBK specimens of a different colour morph were also recorded from the Arafura Sea, the Gulf of Carpentaria and the Torres Strait (Compagno & Stevens, 1993; Last & Stevens, 1994).
A recent benthic biodiversity survey conducted in the Great Barrier Marine Park and Torres Strait region produced a number of benthic elasmobranch samples including several catshark specimens; primarily the alternate A. fasciatus ZBK colour morph. This enabled a taxonomic comparison to be conducted between A. fasciatus ZBK specimens collected from north-east Australian waters and Western Australian specimens used in the original description (Compagno & Stevens 1993). This paper provides a description of a third atelomycterine species endemic to Australian waters, and a fifth species for the genus Atelomycterus ZBK .
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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