Pristis pristis (Linnaeus, 1758)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4803.2.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:325DB7EF-94F7-4726-BC18-7B074D3CB886 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0391567A-6665-FFD5-FF0B-05E268999F43 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Pristis pristis (Linnaeus, 1758) |
status |
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Pristis pristis (Linnaeus, 1758) —largetooth sawfish
Synonyms:
Pristis antiquorum Latham, 1794
Pristis canaliculata Bloch & Schneider, 1801
Pristis perotteti Valenciennes, 1841
Pristis zephyreus Jordan and Starks, 1895
Pristiopsis leichhardti Whitley, 1945
Squalus pristis Linnaeus, 1758
Distribution. This species has predominantly been reported from Texas waters with a few individuals from coastal waters of Louisiana and Florida. The waters of the southeastern U.S. are on the northern periphery of the natural range of this species and individuals captured historically in the waters of the northern GOM, predominantly off Texas, were likely transient individuals utilizing these waters during warmer months of the year. However, there are no recent records of this species from the northern GOM, indicating it may have been extirpated from the region ( Burgess et al. 2009).
First Record in GOM. A rostrum collected prior to 1878 and deposited in the Ichthyology Collection at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia (ANSP 17388; listed as P. antiquorum but verified as P. pristis ) is the first verified record of this species in the GOM ( Burgess et al. 2009), although it is not clear where in the GOM the specimen originated. Many previous records of sawfish originating from the Texas coast could refer to this species as it has been suggested that the ratio of P. pristis to P. pectinata in the area was historically around 1:1, but none of these records could be verified ( Burgess et al. 2009). The mention of this species (as P. perrotteti ) by Gunter (1941) as “probably” occurring off the Texas coast is likely the earliest in the scientific literature ( Baughman 1943 confirmed Gunter’s assertion two years later) although Burgess et al. (2009) list several records starting in 1917 based on images published in the popular press or included in personal correspondences.
Remarks. A recent revision of the sawfish family ( Faria et al. 2013) has indicated the three species generally considered to comprise the largetooth sawfish group are actually a single globally distributed species. Like its congener P. pectinata , P. pristis has a long and convoluted taxonomic history complicated by frequent misidentification, much of which is condensed and summarized by Faria et al. (2013).
Conservation Status. Critically Endangered, listed as Endangered under the United States Endangered Species Act.
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