Acanthurus bahianus Castelnau, 1855

Triay-Portella, Raül, Pajuelo, José G., Manent, Pablo, Espino, Fernando, Ruiz-Díaz, Raquel, Lorenzo, José M. & González, José A., 2015, New records of non-indigenous fishes (Perciformes and Tetraodontiformes) from the Canary Islands (north-eastern Atlantic), Cybium 39 (3), pp. 163-174 : 168

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26028/cybium/2015-393-001

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13613659

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B487A7-771A-FFD2-3130-FB81FC43DA31

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Acanthurus bahianus Castelnau, 1855
status

 

Acanthurus bahianus Castelnau, 1855 View in CoL , ocean surgeon

Material examined. – MMF 44367, one resting female, 168 mm TL, 131 mm SL, El Altillo, 28°11’N 15°33’W, 4 m, 8 Aug. 2014, reef platform ( Fig. 2G View Figure 2 ).

Sightings and catches. – Once, n = 1, same locality ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ).

Remarks. – A tropical reef-associated species ( Robins and Ray, 1986), living from 2 ( Baensch and Debelius, 1997) to 40 m of depth ( Desoutter, 1990), usually at 2-25 m, between 21 and 25°C ( Baensch and Debelius, 1997). Inhabits shallow bottoms with coral or rocky formations ( Cervigón, 1994). Usually occurs in groups of five or more individuals. Mainly diurnal. Feeds on algae ( Robins and Ray, 1986). Maximum length published is 381 mm SL ( Humann, 1994). An amphi-Atlantic species. West Atlantic: Massachusetts, USA and Bermuda southward to southern Brazil ( Froese and Pauly, 2015, Anderson et al., 2015). In the mid-Atlantic: Ascension ( Cadenat and Marchal, 1963; Wirtz et al., 2014) and St. Helena Islands ( Desoutter, 1990). East Atlantic: off Angola ( Smith, 1997).

This is the first record for A. bahianus from the Canary Islands.

MMF

Museu Municipal do Funchal

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