Neomerinthe pallidimacula ( Fowler 1938 )

Matsumoto, Tatsuya & Motomura, Hiroyuki, 2024, Neomerinthe ornithoptera, a new species of scorpionfish (Teleostei: Scorpaenidae) from the southwestern Pacific Ocean, with a reassessment of the diagnosis for N. pallidimacula (Fowler 1938), Zootaxa 5428 (1), pp. 135-145 : 142

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5428.1.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4D62287D-F590-4139-9FF6-62E0B83BD8CB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10845312

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/220E2F6B-FC16-FFB0-FF09-D8A592043B96

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neomerinthe pallidimacula ( Fowler 1938 )
status

 

Reassessment of Neomerinthe pallidimacula ( Fowler 1938) View in CoL diagnosis

Neomerinthe pallidimacula View in CoL was originally described by Fowler (1938) as Scorpaena pallidimacula View in CoL , on the basis of a single specimen (USNM 98889, 76.0 mm SL) from Uanivan Island, Philippines, which remains the only known confirmed example of the species. Although N. pallidimacula View in CoL has been distinguished from all other Indo-Pacific congeners by the lack of lateral lacrimal and second preopercular spines ( Motomura et al. 2016), a few specimens lacking lateral lacrimal and second preopercular spines have been observed in N. bucephalus , N. kaufmani View in CoL , and N. megalepis View in CoL (see Matsumoto & Motomura 2023; this study). However, N. pallidimacula View in CoL clearly differs from the latter two species by having 45 scale rows in longitudinal series (vs. 37–44 in N. kaufmani View in CoL ; 37–43 in N. megalepis View in CoL ), 12 lower scale rows in the lateral line (vs. 8 or 9 in N. kaufmani View in CoL ; 8–10 in N. megalepis View in CoL ), and cycloid scales between the isthmus and posterior to the pelvic-fins (vs. ctenoid scales). Neomerinthe pallidimacula View in CoL is similar to N. bucephalus in sharing the following morphological characteristics; numerous cycloid scales between isthmus and posterior to pelvic fins, 45 scale rows in longitudinal series (vs. 40–45 in N. bucephalus ), 12 scale rows below the lateral line (vs. 9–12), and 20 pectoral-fin rays (vs. 18–20). However, the former clearly differs from N. bucephalus in having a longer upper jaw, length 25.0% of SL (vs. 19.1–23.6% of SL in N. bucephalus , based on 60 specimens) ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ), greater maxilla depth, 8.2% of SL (vs. 5.7–7.6% of SL) ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ), shorter eleventh dorsal-fin spine, length 5.7% of SL (vs. 6.8–10.8% of SL) ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ), and 22 pored lateral-line scales (vs. 23–25). In addition, the caudal-peduncle depth of N. pallidimacula View in CoL is 11.3 % of SL, tending to be greater than that of N. bucephalus (8.6–11.6% of SL) ( Fig. 4D View FIGURE 4 ). Although N. pallidimacula View in CoL could be assessed only on the basis of a single specimen, comparisons were made with many examples of N. bucephalus . The study concluded that N. pallidimacula View in CoL is a valid species, morphologically distinct from N. bucephalus .

Although Motomura et al. (2016) included in the diagnosis of N. pallidimacula View in CoL , three white stripes on the lateral surface of the trunk, such a characteristic has been noted in some other long-term preserved specimens of the genus Neomerinthe View in CoL [e.g., USNM 202511, 85.4 mm SL, holotype of N. kaufmani View in CoL (see Matsumoto & Motomura 2023: fig. 9a); USNM 51266, 38.7 mm SL, paratype of Scorpaena izensis View in CoL ( Jordan & Starks, 1904) and N. ignea (see Matsumoto et al. 2023: fig. 2d)], and it is clearly not diagnostic of the former species.

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