Cheilopogon formosus formosus ( Kotthaus, 1969 )

Shakhovskoy, Ilia B. & Parin, Nikolay V., 2019, A review of the flying fish genus Cypselurus (Beloniformes: Exocoetidae). Part 1. Revision of the subgenus Zonocypselurus Parin and Bogorodsky, 2011 with descriptions of one new subgenus, four new species and two new subspecies and reinstatement of one species as valid, Zootaxa 4589 (1), pp. 1-71 : 6-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4589.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:860E8CF0-A245-46DA-9023-B0BD825730D0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3798280

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A65D1A-FFFE-FFF7-0DF6-55D821C5F81D

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scientific name

Cheilopogon formosus formosus ( Kotthaus, 1969 )
status

 

Cheilopogon formosus formosus ( Kotthaus, 1969)

( Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 ; Tables 1–5)

Cypselurus formosus Kotthaus, 1969: 17–19 View in CoL , Figs. 168, 169 (original description, waters of western India).

Cypselurus hexazona View in CoL (non Bleeker). Parin 1996: 302 (in part; description, considering C. formosus View in CoL as a junior synonym of C. hexazona View in CoL ). Parin & Bogorodsky 2011: 683–686 [658–660 in English translation] (in part; description, distribution).

Material examined. Nine specimens 38–144 mm SL.

Full morphological study. IORAS 03412 (1 specimen, 144 mm SL), Cochin, India, 9.02.1980 .

Partial morphological study. ZMH H4985 View Materials * (ex IOES 79 a), holotype (1, 53.5 mm SL), 14°44’7N, 73°54’E, 15.02.1965 GoogleMaps . ZMH H4986 View Materials *, paratypes (7, 38– 52 mm SL), 14°44’7N, 73°54’E, 15.02.1965 GoogleMaps .

The holotype and paratypes of Cypselurus formosus Kotthaus, 1969 , were studied by the second author. Their characters are given below.

Holotype ( Figure 1b View FIGURE 1 ). ZMH H4985 View Materials (ex IOES 79 a), Meteor, 15.02.1965, 14°44’7N 73°54’E, 53.5 mm SL. D 13, A 10, P I 13, Spred 25, Str 7½. Measurements (in % SL): c 25.4, o 9.7, io 1 9.3, H 16.0, h 8.2, p 13.6, cV 1 32.3, pV 40.0, aV 56.2, Dc 28.4, lP 63.9, lV 40.7, HD 19.8, HA 13.0. The longest ray of dorsal fin – the 2nd; of anal fin – the 4th. Dorsal fin with black spot between 2nd and 12th rays. Anal fin with black spot on distal part, between the 4th and 9th rays. Pectoral fins pale with dark areas at base of the upper part and near posterior margin. Pelvic fins with dark spot distally. GoogleMaps

Paratypes. ZMH H4986 View Materials , Meteor, 15.02.1965, 14°44’7N 73°54’E, seven specimens 38–52 mm SL. All paratypes with traces of 6 transverse dark bands on the body ( Fig. 1a View FIGURE 1 ): near pectoral-fin base, near pelvic-fin base, between pectoral and pelvic fins, between base of pelvic fin and anal-fin origin, near posterior parts of dorsal and anal fins, near end of caudal peduncle. In addition, there is another band on the head that passes through the eye GoogleMaps .

Description. There was only one large specimen (in poor condition) at our disposal, which we identified as Ch. formosus formosus ( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 c–e), with the following characters: D 12?, A 10?, P I 14, Spred 28, Str 7½, Sp.br 23 (7 + 16). SL 144 mm. Measurements (in %SL): aA 78.8?, aD 70.2?, aV 59.7, cV 32.7, pV 38.1, c 25.8, po 11.8, o 8.2, ao 5.5, io 9.5, Dc 26.4?, lP 68.6?, lP 1 42.5, lV 29.7?, lD 18.6, lA 11.1?, HD 12.6, p 13.1?. Pectoral fins dark with paler triangle stripe (“mirror”) and three dark spots behind it ( Fig. 1d View FIGURE 1 ); pelvic fins 3 hyaline with dark stripe distally ( Fig. 1e View FIGURE 1 ); dorsal fin relatively high, pale brown. Tip of pectoral fin extends to middle of caudal peduncle; tip of pelvic fin reaches posterior third of anal-fin base. Tip of last dorsal-fin ray protrudes not far beyond middle of caudal peduncle. Jaw teeth large, conical and recurved, arranged in two rows near symphysis. Palatine teeth few in number (1 tooth on anterior part of palatines and 1–2 teeth on the posterior).

A detailed description of Ch. formosus formosus juveniles is given in the work of Kotthaus (1969). The characters of those fish are shown in Tables 1–5. The measurements of 6 juveniles 40.2–52.5 mm SL, made by Kotthaus, are as follows: aA 76.2–81.4 (mean 79.3), aD 60.7–74.5 (67.7), aV 57.1–60.9 (58.2), c 21.8–23.5 (22.6), o 9.3–10.7 (9.9), ao 3.5–6.0 (4.5), io 9.3–10.7 (9.8), H 17.1–19.8 (18.2), h 7.0–8.6 (7.7), lP 61.9–71.2 (66.4), lV 38.6–43.5 (41.1), lD 19.0–21.4 (20.3), lA 12.6–16.3 (13.7), HD 17.4–22.6 (20.0), HA 11.3–14.5 (12.7), p 11.2–12.5 (11.6).

Common names. The name “slender toothy flying fish” (Russian: “cтpoйный зyбacтый длиннoкpыл”) is proposed here.

Comparative remarks. Based on the data of Kotthaus and our material, the following conclusions can be drawn. Specimens of Ch. formosus formosus overall are similar to those described here as Ch. formosus pseudospilopterus and Ch. formosus andamanicus (see below) and, apparently, they are conspecific. However, there are also some differences, sufficient in our opinion for isolating a subspecies: Ch. f. formosus differs in higher values of HD, HA and h ( Figs. 2c, e, f View FIGURE 2 ) and in fewer pectoral-fin rays (in the last 2 characters it differs only from Ch. f. andamanicus). At the same time, the strong differences of juveniles in head length and body width are explained by a discrepancy between the measurements of Kotthaus and our method. Thus, the head length of the holotype of Cypselurus formosus is 22.6% SL according to the data of Kotthaus, but as much as 25.4% SL, according to our measurements. Also, the body width of the holotype, measured from its photograph (Fig. 168 in Kotthaus 1969; see also Fig. 1b View FIGURE 1 in this paper), is about 14% SL, while according to Kotthaus’ data only 11.4% SL; it is thus obvious that he measured the width not at bases of pectoral fins, but behind them.

There are also differences in pigmentation compared to the other subspecies: the pelvic fins of juveniles of Ch. f. formosus are not pigmented at the base. In addition, according to Kotthaus, Ch. f. formosus has strongly developed palatine teeth, which are larger in number than jaw teeth; this was not observed in the other subspecies we studied. The only specimen available of Ch. f. formosus has teeth located not only on the anterior part of the palatines, as the representatives of two other subspecies have, but also on the posterior part.

Thus, we refer fish from the waters of Indonesia and Thailand, the Andaman Sea and the western coast of India to three different subspecies of one species – Ch. formosus .

Distribution. Cheilopogon f. formosus occurs along the western coast of India from Goa to Cochin ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). The distribution of this subspecies, as well as the species as a whole, is likely wider in reality and its rarity may be explained by its habitation mainly in coastal waters from where we had few samples.

3. Here and elsewhere the pigmentation of the underside of pelvic fins is meant.

ZMH

Zoologisches Museum Hamburg

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Beloniformes

Family

Exocoetidae

Genus

Cheilopogon

SubGenus

Amustotrogon

Loc

Cheilopogon formosus formosus ( Kotthaus, 1969 )

Shakhovskoy, Ilia B. & Parin, Nikolay V. 2019
2019
Loc

Cypselurus formosus

Kotthaus, A. 1969: 19
1969
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