Hemiramphus far (Forsskål 1775)

Bariche, Michel & Fricke, Ronald, 2020, The marine ichthyofauna of Lebanon: an annotated checklist, history, biogeography, and conservation status, Zootaxa 4775 (1), pp. 1-157 : 118

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4775.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C3E5AF7F-1C84-450E-B228-BD78D0084071

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4346426

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6E2F87D6-FFF7-FFA4-FF2E-FC01FDDDFC10

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Hemiramphus far (Forsskål 1775)
status

 

Hemiramphus far (Forsskål 1775) View in CoL —Black-barred halfbeak

Taxonomy. First record from Lebanon as Hemiramphus unifasciatus, Ranz. View in CoL and Hemiramphus marginatus, Bleek View in CoL by Gruvel (1931: 86); subsequently recorded as Hemiramphus far (Forskäl 1775) View in CoL by George et al. (1964: 14); as Hemiramphus far (Forsskål) View in CoL by Mouneimné (1977: 62); as Hemiramphus far (Forsskål 1775) View in CoL by Mouneimné (2002: 104); recently recorded as Hemiramphus far View in CoL by Carpentieri et al. (2009: 3); as Hemiramphus far View in CoL by Bariche et al. (2015: 2366). Material in collection: FMNH, ROM and USNM.

Distribution. Red Sea, Indo-West Pacific: East and South Africa, Seychelles, to Madagascar and Mascarenes east to Philippines, Samoa and Tonga, north to southern Japan, south to Western Australia and New South Wales ( Australia); Mediterranean Sea (Red Sea immigrant).

Conservation. IUCN: Global (NE). Capture and threats: Unknown. Occurrence: Rare. Non-indigenous species, no conservation action needed.

Hyporhamphus affinis (Günther 1866) —Tropical halfbeak

Taxonomy. First record from Lebanon as Hyporhamphus cf. dussumieri (Valenciennes 1846) by George & Athanassiou (1967: 279); subsequently recorded as Hyporhampus dussumieri (Valenciennes) by Mouneimné (1977: 62); as Hyporhampus dussumieri (Valenciennes 1846) by Mouneimné (2002: 104). Material in collection: AUBM.

Distribution. Red Sea, Indo-West Pacific: East Africa, Seychelles and Madagascar east to Tuamotu Archipelago, north to Philippines, south to northwestern Australia and New Caledonia; Mediterranean Sea (Red Sea immigrant).

Conservation. IUCN: Global (NE). Capture and threats: Unknown. Occurrence: Rare. Non-indigenous species, no conservation action needed.

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