Squalus Linnaeus, 1758

De, Sarah T., De, Marcelo R. & Gomes, Ulisses L., 2016, Taxonomy and morphology of species of the genus Squalus Linnaeus, 1758 from the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean (Chondrichthyes: Squaliformes: Squalidae), Zootaxa 4133 (1), pp. 1-89 : 7-8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4133.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E7276A63-67C8-4BC5-8419-2EBDAE4432B0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6075715

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/282F878E-FF8F-FF88-14C0-27A9FC935982

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Squalus Linnaeus, 1758
status

 

Genus Squalus Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL View at ENA

Squalus Artedi, 1738: 504 View in CoL (description); Linnaeus, 1758: 233 (original description; “Oceano Europaeo”); Molina, 1782: 188, 189 (listed; Chile); Rafinesque, 1810: 45 (listed; Sicily); Girard, 1855 (listed; Chile); Gill, 1862: 367–405 (in classification); Poey, 1868: 211, 213, 454 (listed; Cuba); Berg, 1895: 5, 6 (listed; Argentina and Uruguay); Jordan & Evermann, 1898: 53, fig. 24 (listed; North and Central America); Schreiner & Ribeiro, 1903: 79 (listed; Brazil); Jordan, 1907: 202 (cited); Miranda Ribeiro, 1907: 167, 168 (listed; Brazil); Regan, 1908: 39, 45, 48 (identification key, listed; global); Garman, 1913: 191 (description; global); Miranda Ribeiro, 1923 (listed; Brazil); Howell-Rivero, 1936: 45 (revision; Cuba); Fowler, 1936: 69–71 (description; Western Africa); Fowler, 1941: 129 (listed; Brazil); Bigelow & Schroeder, 1948: 451–480, figs 87–90 (revision; Northwestern Atlantic); Bigelow, Schroeder & Springer, 1953: 220–222 (cited; Western Atlantic); Bigelow & Schroeder, 1957: 26–37, figs 3, 4 (description); Ledoux, 1970, 65–69 (revision; Mediterranean Sea); Bass et al., 1976 (revision; Eastern South Africa); Figueiredo, 1977: 8 (listed; Southeastern Brazil); Cadenat & Blache, 1981: 46–52; figs 28–31 (revision; Mediterranean Sea, North Atlantic Ocean); Figueiredo, 1981: 17 (listed; Brazil); Lucena & Lucena, 1981: 2–4 (listed; Brazil); Compagno, 1984: 109–123 (revision; global); Kondyurin & Myagkov, 1984: 118–120, (revision; Western Atlantic); Menni et al., 1984: 62, 83, 84 (listed; Argentina and Uruguay); Myagkov & Kondyurin, 1986: 1–20 (revision; Atlantic); Muñoz-Chápuli & Ramos, 1989 (revision; Eastern Atlantic); Gadig & Moreira, 1992: 112, 118 (cited; Brazil); Calderón, 1994 (cited; Brazil); Marques, 1994 (description; Brazil); Gomes et al., 1997: 93–98 (listed, description; Brazil); Cervigón & Alcal, 1999: 122 (revision; Venezuela); Compagno & Niem, 1999: 1229–1232 (revision; Western-Central Pacific); Lessa et al., 1999 (cited, listed; Brazil); Marques, 1999 (description; Brazil); Mazzoleni & Schwingel, 1999: 114 (listed; South Brazil); Gadig et al., 2000: 129 (cited; Cear, Brazil); Gadig, 2001: 54–59 (revision; Brazil); Soto, 2001: 94–96 (listed; Brazil); Compagno, 2002: 380–385 (revision; Western Central Atlantic); Nion et al., 2002: 4, 65 (listed; Uruguay); Haimovici et al., 2003 (cited; Brazil); Meneses & Paesch, 2003: 7, 8, 25 (listed; Uruguay, Argentina); Heemstra & Heemstra, 2004 (cited, Southern Africa): 49, 53–54; Soto & Mincarone, 2004: 73–82 (listed; Brazil); Compagno et al., 2005: 72 (description; global); Haddad & Gadig, 2005 (cited; Brazil); Lamilla & Bustamante, 2005: 9, 26 (cited; Chile); Hazin et al., 2006 (cited; Northeastern Brazil); Jablonski et al., 2006 (cited; Brazil); Nelson, 2006: 66 (listed; global); Last et al., 2007 (revision; Australia); Louro & Rossi- Wongtschowski, 2007 (cited; Brazil); Menni & Lucifora, 2007: 2, 3 (listed; Argentina, Uruguay); Pon & Gandini, 2007 (cited; Argentina); Carrier et al., 2010: 44, 127, 139 (cited); Gomes et al., 2010: 44, 45 (cited; Brazil); Menni et al., 2010 (cited; Southwestern Atlantic); Saéz et al., 2010: 623, 624 (identification key; Chile); Tomás et al., 2010 (cited; Brazil); Viana, 2011: 1–373 (description; Southwestern Atlantic); Eschmeyer & Fricke, 2015 (listed; global); Bornatowski & Abilhoa, 2012: 35 (cited; Brazil); Rosa & Gadig, 2014: 92, 97 (listed, cited; Brazil).

Acanthorhinus Blainville, 1816: 121 (original description, not illustrated); Fowler, 1936: 61 (cited); Bigelow & Schroeder, 1948: 452 (cited).

Spinax: Cuvier, 1817: 130 (cited); Cuvier, 1863: 320 (listed).

Acanthias Risso, 1826: 131 (original description, not illustrated; Mediterranean Sea); Müller & Henle, 1841: 83 (listed); Gill, 1861: 60 (listed; North and Central America; used Squalus View in CoL for Carcharhinus View in CoL in this work); Duméril, 1865: 435, 436 (description); Günther, 1866: 384, 396 (listed; Central America); Vaillant, 1888: 7 (cited; Argentina).

Type species: Squalus acanthias Linnaeus, 1758 by subsequent designation of Gill (1862: 405).

Diagnosis. Squalus is characterized by the following combination of characters: slender and fusiform body, arched dorsally at anterior region; lateral keels restricted to caudal peduncle; short snout, rounded or obtuse at the tip; anterior nasal flaps lobe-like, however without forming nasal barbels; presence of slender dorsal spines without lateral grooves prior to each dorsal fin, extending or not to the apex of corresponding fin; second dorsal fin considerably smaller and more raked than first dorsal fin; caudal peduncle with conspicuous upper and lower precaudal pits; asymmetric caudal fin without subterminal notch; dorsal caudal lobe considerably greater in length than ventral caudal lobe; teeth unicuspid, small, similar in both jaws with short, slightly oblique cusps; dermal denticles unicuspid or tricuspid.

Squalus is distinguished from Cirrhigaleus in having anterior nasal flaps with short secondary lobe without forming nasal barbels (vs. secondary lobe very elongated and forming nasal barbels extending to anterior margin of mouth), second dorsal fin smaller and lower than first dorsal fin (vs. dorsal fins of similar length and height with second dorsal fin as high and large as first dorsal fin), second dorsal-fin spine larger in length than first dorsal-fin spine (vs. second dorsal-fin spine equal in length to first dorsal-fin spine), and conspicuous upper and lower precaudal pits (vs. absence of lower precaudal pit). It is further differentiated from Cirrhigaleus by having narrow dermal denticles (vs. denticles conspicuously broad), and body fusiform and somewhat arched dorsally throughout all of its length (vs. body robust and markedly humped dorsally).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Elasmobranchii

Order

Squaliformes

Family

Squalidae

Loc

Squalus Linnaeus, 1758

De, Sarah T., De, Marcelo R. & Gomes, Ulisses L. 2016
2016
Loc

Acanthorhinus

Bigelow 1948: 452
Fowler 1936: 61
1936
Loc

Acanthias

Dumeril 1865: 435
Gill 1861: 60
Muller 1841: 83
Risso 1826: 131
1826
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF