Gymnothorax pseudoherrei Böhlke 2000
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4704.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0AF043C6-38E4-4546-A7FB-C43BAC5A9837 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5933460 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A84F87BC-FFB3-6914-FF5A-FE2AFB60FE57 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Gymnothorax pseudoherrei Böhlke 2000 |
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Gymnothorax pseudoherrei Böhlke 2000 View in CoL —Dwarf Brown Moray
( Figure 33 View FIGURE 33 )
Gymnothorax pseudoherrei Böhlke 2000: 408 View in CoL , figs. 2F, 3D, 7 (W side of Solino [Selinog] I., Zamboanga Del Norte, Mindanao, Philippines, 8°51’24”N, 123°24’36”E, 0–4.6 m). Holotype, USNM 357430. — Golani & Bogorodsky 2010: 10; Golani & Fricke 2018: 22.
Gymnothorax herrei View in CoL (non Beebe & Tee Van): Randall & Golani 1995: 860.
Red Sea material. Saudi Arabia: KAUMM 409 [ KAU 12-1082] (1, 112), Al Lith; KAUMM 410 [ KAU 14-869] (1, 116), Al Lith; SMF 33616 (1, 107), Al Lith; SMF 35822 [ KAU 12-1083] (1, 171), Al Lith; SMF 35877 [ KAU 17- 245] (1, 127), Farasan Archipelago, Abkar Island. Eritrea: HUJ 15113 (2, 185-193), Dahlak Archipelago, Romia Island; USNM 312234 (8, 116–204), Sheikh el Abu; USNM 312247 (1, 150), Melita Bay. Yemen: USNM 397542 (1, 171), Hanish Island.
Comparative material. Arabian Gulf: BPBM 33328 About BPBM (1, 291) ; BPBM 33356 About BPBM (3, 208–256). Gulf of Oman : BPBM 21473 About BPBM (1, 208). Sri Lanka : USNM 357433 About USNM (3, 116–155, paratypes). Philippines : USNM 357430 About USNM (1, 147, holotype), Mindanao ; USNM 357432 About USNM (2, 114–121, paratypes), Palawan. Indonesia : USNM 210269 (1, 148) ; USNM 274957 About USNM (1, 103). Papua New Guinea : USNM 357431 About USNM (2, 126–156, paratypes) .
Description. In TL: preanal length 2.0–2.4, predorsal length 8.1–12, head length 7.2–9.5, body depth at anus 16–25. In head length: snout length 5.7–6.9, eye diameter 7.9–11, upper-jaw length 2.7–3.4. Pores: LL 2, SO 3, IO 4, POM 6. Vertebrae: predorsal 5–8, preanal 42–50, total 111–120.
Body somewhat elongate in smaller specimens, becoming moderately stout with growth; anus slightly before midlength; dorsal-fin origin before gill opening. Snout relatively short and tapering, jaws of equal length. Eye moderate, over middle of upper jaw. Anterior nostril tubular; posterior nostril above anterior part of eye.
Teeth smooth, relatively short, stout and pointed. Intermaxillary teeth in a single peripheral series, 6–8 on each side, conical, increasing in size posteriorly; 1–2 median stout teeth. Maxillary teeth biserial, about 7–14 larger inner teeth and 19–21 smaller outer teeth, those in outer row obtusely pointed. Dentary with 1–4 larger inner conical teeth anteriorly and about 17–25 smaller blade-like outer teeth. Vomerine teeth stout, blunt, uniserial or staggered, about 7–13.
Color: medium to dark brown with an irregular network of indistinct small, darker markings, head paler than body, lower part of head lighter, sometimes with dark lines along throat grooves, one continuing into angle of mouth. Posterior one-fourth of body and fins yellow in smaller specimens, yellow color gradually disappears with growth. Iris white with black outer ring. Body frequently covered with a gray or greenish mucus.
Maximum size about 300 mm.
Distribution and habitat. Northwestern Indian Ocean and western Pacific, from the Red Sea and Arabian Gulf to the Solomon Islands, in shallow water, generally less than 10 m depth. It has not been collected from the coast of Africa or the islands of the western Indian Ocean west and south of the Maldives. A cryptic species living inside coastal reefs, never seen alive.
Remarks. Specimens from the northwestern Indian Ocean (Red Sea, Arabian Gulf, and Gulf of Oman) apparently grow larger than those from elsewhere. Out of more than 100 specimens reported by Böhlke (2000) from east of the Maldives, the largest was 182 mm (ANSP 144601 from Queensland, Australia). The largest of only 12 specimens reported from the northwestern Indian Ocean, by contrast, was 291 mm (BPBM 33328, from the Arabian Gulf). Several other specimens from this area exceeded 200 mm. There is a slight difference in the number of vertebrae between these two groups. Nineteen specimens from the Red Sea, Arabian Gulf, and Gulf of Oman had 113–120 total vertebrae; nine specimens from Sri Lanka, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Papua New Guinea had 111–116. The Red Sea and Arabian Gulf specimens also have dark throat grooves, which are not evident in those from the Pacific. We have no genetic data from outside the Red Sea. This species was confused in the past with the superficially similar Gymnothorax herrei Beebe & Tee-Van , from which it differs by having two branchial pores instead of one, the origin of the dorsal fin more anterior, and lacking an intermediate row of small intermaxillary teeth. In the present COI phylogeny ( Fig. 48 View FIGURE 48 ) two specimens are included that have been collected during the course of this study. As no COI sequence data from other specimens are available, we cannot infer the level of intraspecific genetic divergence. Gymnothorax pseudoherrei forms part of a well supported clade with a number of other taxa, such as G. griseus and G. thyrsoideus , but also Echidna unicolor and E. delicatula ( Fig. 48 View FIGURE 48 ).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Gymnothorax pseudoherrei Böhlke 2000
Smith, David G., Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Mal, Ahmad O. & Alpermann, Tilman J. 2019 |
Gymnothorax herrei
Randall, J. E. & Golani, D. 1995: 860 |