Elacatinus lori, Patrick L. Colin, 2002

Patrick L. Colin, 2002, A new species of sponge-dwelling Elacatinus (Pisces: Gobiidae) from the western Caribbean., Zootaxa 106, pp. 1-7 : 2-6

publication ID

z00106p001

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6277421

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FA672F31-DFEA-A8E8-F2BA-5B6EEF2BC5F2

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Elacatinus lori
status

new species

Elacatinus lori View in CoL   ZBK - new species

Figures 1-2

Gobiosoma horsti   ZBK (white color form, in part) Colin, 1975:102-103., Greenfield and Johnson, 1999: 265.

Gobiosoma illecebrosum   ZBK , (non Böhlke and Robins, 1968), Humann 1994.

Material Examined- Holotype: UF 2030716 , formerly UMML 30716 , (a female, 45.6 mm SL), BELIZE, barrier reef, Tobacco Reef , 22-27 m depth, 26 Oct. 1972, P.L. Colin. Paratypes: UF 234708 , BELIZE, same data as holotype , (6 ind. 12.0-36.8 mm SL, 3 largest female, others undetermined) .

Description-

Morphometrics of holotype and three largest paratype specimens (29.8-36.8 mm SL) as percent of standard length: head length, 24.0-27.7; upper jaw length, 10.0-12.0; eye diameter, 6.2-7.6; snout length, 5.6-6.0; mouth width; 10.6-11.6; greatest depth, 21.0-23.4; depth at dorsal origin, 18.6-23.4; depth at caudal peduncle, 12.5-13.9; pectoral fin length, 22.5-27.0; pelvic fin length, 17.6-19.2; caudal fin length, 22.3-24.0. Fin-ray counts: D. VII, 12-13; A. 11; P. 18-19.

The body is naked, elongate, somewhat laterally compressed. The mouth is terminal in position and U-shaped. A rostral frenum is absent. Tongue is rounded. The dorsal fin is without elongated anterior spines. Caudal fin is rounded. The ventral fin cup is complete.

The lower jaw has a small patch of recurved canine teeth on either side inside a row of smaller stubby canines near the anterior end. The upper jaw has a few much smaller canines in the area above the patch on the jaw, with tiny canines in a row along the edge of the jaw. As the 4 largest specimens were female, no assessment of sex-related dentition differences could be made. Such differences are known in other species of Elacatinus   ZBK ( Böhlke and Robins, 1968).

The three largest specimens were ripe females (36.8-29.8 mm SL)

Color Pattern in Life: The most prominent feature is the thin white lateral stripe just above the mid-line of the body running anteriorly from the upper part of the eye posteriorly to the origin of the caudal fin. On the upper surface of the eye the stripe is slightly wider than on the body. When looking straight ahead, the eye line is aligned with the body stripe (Fig. 1). A thin white stripe (called a "bar" by Colin, 1975) is found on the mid-line of the snout, running from near the forward margin of the eyes to near the upper lip (Fig. 1). Its width is similar to the stripe on the body. The body has a broad dark lateral stripe running along the mid-line. Its upper limit is at the white lateral stripe along its entire length. Its lower margin starts at the lower edge of the eye, drops slightly lower on the belly, then becomes narrower posteriorly. It ends in a rounded extension on the anterior part of the caudal fin, extending further posteriorly than the white stripe. Other than the extension of the dark lateral stripe onto the caudal fin, all fins are clear and colorless. The area above the white lateral stripe is dark to the origin of the first dorsal fin, then is pale posteriorly. The bases of the dorsal fins have some melanophores. The dorsal portion of the head is dark between the eyes and onto the snout. The lips are dark anteriorly becoming pale posteriorly where they merge with the pale coloration of the ventral surface of the head. The ventral surface of the mouth, throat, abdomen and tail are pale. Eye black with the exception of the white stripe on its upper surface.

Color Pattern in Preserved Specimens: In the preserved specimens used in this description, the white lateral stripe and snout stripe are still plainly visible as a dark line 30 years after preservation in all specimens. The posterior extension of the dark lateral stripe is visible as a dark splotch at the base of the caudal fin. Otherwise the dark stripe has faded to just a faint area. This was also found to be the case in non-type specimens held in the FMNH since the 1970’s, collected by D.W. Greenfield.

Geographic Range: E. lori   ZBK is known only from the Gulf of Honduras where it occurs along the Belize barrier reef and offshore atolls, plus the Bay Islands of Honduras. Its range appears to be mutually exclusive to that of E. horsti (W) , known from Haiti, Jamaica and Serranilla Bank, and E. horsti (Y) , known from the Cayman Islands and northern Bahamas (Colin, 1975). E. lori   ZBK is the only shallow-water (generally above 20-30 m) sponge-dwelling Elacatinus   ZBK found in the Gulf of Honduras; E. louisae   ZBK occurs deeper in that region. It is not known what shallow-water sponge-dwelling Elacatinus   ZBK , if any, occurs further north in the Yucatan Channel.

Etymology: Named for Lori Jane Bell Colin in recognition of her numerous contributions to the biology of coral reef fishes.

Remarks- Elacatinus lori   ZBK is most similar to the white color form of E. horsti (Fig. 2b). Since the pattern and coloration of E. lori   ZBK is consistent across its known range and is the only shallow-water sponge-dwelling Elacatinus   ZBK in the Gulf of Honduras, it was decided it did indeed represent a valid species. The narrow snout stripe in E. lori   ZBK easily separates this species from E. horsti (W) and remains visible in well-preserved material.

The only other Elacatinus   ZBK that might be confused with E. lori   ZBK are two others with a snout marking and terminal/subterminal mouth position; E. xanthiprora   ZBK and E. randalli   ZBK (Fig. 2). However, both species have a wider lateral stripe and wide snout marking with rounded ends which would distinguish them from E. lori   ZBK . Additionally E. randalli   ZBK has the mouth subterminal, rather than terminal, in position and is a cleaning coral-dwelling species. Additional species of Elacatinus   ZBK with snout-markings are shown in Figure 2.

E. lori   ZBK was extremely common on the barrier reef and offshore atolls of Belize and at Roatan Island, Honduras. Greenfield and Johnson (1999:265), based on ichthyocide stations, reported the depth range of E. lori   ZBK as being generally 9-24 m (although one or a few individuals were recorded at 0-1.2 m). They reported a similar depth range for E. louisae   ZBK (12-24 m), however the depth involved (12-24 m) are those where both species may occur. However, E. lori   ZBK was not found below about 30 m and E. lousiae was extremely common at those depths and below. Regarding the collection from 0-1.2 m, E. lori   ZBK might occur in very shallow water, if the proper species of sponges were present. Such sponges, though, are generally found at minimum depths of 6-9 m in areas protected from the wave action near the surface.

E. lori   ZBK shares what appears to be a common range with a southern population of the cleaning goby, E. oceanops   ZBK , which is limited to the Gulf of Honduras. Although Greenfield and Johnson (1999) identified E. oceanops   ZBK from Belize as E. evelynae   ZBK , indicating it was common in that area, I examined these specimens at the Field Museum of Natural History and determined all were E. oceanops   ZBK . The zoogeography of Elacatinus   ZBK in the tropical Western Atlantic is complex and is receiving further attention.

UMML

UMML

FMNH

USA, Illinois, Chicago, Field Museum of Natural History (also used by Finnish Museum of Natural History)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Perciformes

Family

Gobiidae

Genus

Elacatinus

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF