Cerogobius
gen. nov.
Diagnosis. The new genus has the following combination of characters unique among known gobiid genera: 1) unpaired horn-like tentacle at the level of nostrils on the snout midline ( Fig. 1A
View FIGURE 1
); 2) snout with steep profile from lateral view and very short, about 0.4–0.5 of eye diameter; 3) orbit projecting forward and elevated, obviously extending above dorsal profile of the head; 4) posterior angle of jaws extends behind vertical through posterior edge of eye; 5) lower limb of first gill arch joined to gill cover by membrane; 6) caudal peduncle deep and short, 0.8-0.9 of body depth at anal-fin origin, and caudal-peduncle depth slightly to distinctly greater than its length; 7) segmented caudal-fin rays 17; 8) pelvic fins completely separated and without frenum ( Fig. 1C
View FIGURE 1
); 9) head and body completely scaleless; 10) no head canals; 11) preorbital rows r, s, s 3 each reduced to a single papilla; 12) suborbital sensory papillae rows a and b absent; four very short transverse suborbital rows of sensory papillae (1-4) present, row 1 oblique, reaching upper lip, row 2 distant from eye, close to row d, rows 3 and 4 close to posteroventral edge of eye and distant from row d, row d short; 13) oculoscapular rows reduced to rows x 1, x 2, z, as 1 and as 2, with only x 1 having more than 2 papillae ( Fig. 2
View FIGURE 2
); 14) dorsal-fin pterygiophore insertion pattern 3-22110; 15) 10 precaudal vertebrae + 17 caudal vertebrae; 16) hypurals 1–2 and 3–4 not fused, distinctly separate along entire length; 17) two anal-fin pterygiophores inserted anterior to haemal arch.
Description. Body elongate, laterally compressed posteriorly, caudal peduncle short and deep, its depth 0.8– 0.9 of body depth at anal-fin origin, caudal peduncle 1.04–1.17 times deeper than its length ( Fig. 3
View FIGURE 3
). Head slightly depressed, head depth 0.9 of width to almost equal to width. Snout with steep profile from lateral view, very short, about 0.4-0.5 of eye diameter. Unpaired horn-like tentacle at the level of nostrils on the snout midline, length of tentacle slightly shorter than diameter of eye when measured from the anterior side. Anterior nostril a tube without process on rim, posterior nostril a short tube ( Fig. 1A
View FIGURE 1
). Orbit projecting forward and upper part of orbit obviously elevated above dorsal profile of the head. Interorbital narrow, about 0.2 of eye diameter. No tentacle above eye. Mouth terminal, oblique. Posterior angle of jaws behind vertical through posterior margin of eye. Upper lip wider than cheek ( Figs. 1B, 1D
View FIGURE 1
), covered with a thin dermal flap, extending upwards over cheek and nearly reaching eye ( Fig. 1B
View FIGURE 1
) (only in paratype SMF 35963 dermal flap shorter, Fig. 1D
View FIGURE 1
). Cheek very narrow. Teeth in both jaws in a single row posteriorly, becoming 3–4 rows anteriorly, with outer row as of enlarged recurved canines, and inner rows of smaller, pointed, and irregularly spaced teeth. Branchiostegal membranes fused to isthmus, gill openings restricted to pectoral-fin base. Lower limb of first gill arch joined to gill cover by membrane. Small mental frenum, at midventral behind lower lip. No spines on preopercle. Two dorsal fins, first fin with VI spines, not elongated or filamentous, second dorsal fin I,12–13. Pectoral-fin rays count low, 13–14 (usually 13). Pectoral girdle without flaps on anterior edge. Uppermost rays of pectoral fin within membrane. Pelvic fins I,5 + 5,I, left and right fin completely separated, lacking both an anterior frenum and membrane connecting innermost rays ( Fig. 1C
View FIGURE 1
); pelvic fins short, the length 0.6–0.8 of distance between origin of fins and anus. Caudal fin rounded, shorter than head length, with 17 segmented rays. Head and body completely scaleless. No head canals. Rows of head sensory papillae greatly reduced, with rows missing or reduced to one or a few papillae, and additional individual papillae present on the position of absent head canal pores. Preorbital rows r, s, s 3 each reduced to single papilla. Suborbital rows of sensory papillae with rows a and b absent; four very short transverse suborbital rows of sensory papillae (1–4) present, row 1 oblique, reaching upper lip, row 2 distant from eye, close to row d, rows 3 and 4 close to posteroventral edge of eye and distant from row d, row d short, above posterior part of upper lip and continuing shortly on cheek. Oculoscapular rows reduced to rows x 1, x 2, z, as 1 and as 2, only x 1 of more than 2 papillae ( Fig. 2
View FIGURE 2
). Head and body to below origin of the second dorsal fin densely covered with very small, irregular, black spots some within blackish background, body behind the vertical of origin of the second dorsal fin pale with sparsely scattered melanophores; head with oblique, irregular, white band behind orbit. Dorsal-fin pterygiophore insertion pattern 3-22110. Vertebrae (including urostyle) 27 (precaudal + caudal vertebrae: 10 + 17). Hypurals 1–2 and 3–4 not fused, distinctly separate along entire length. Two anal-fin pterygiophores inserted anterior to haemal arch.
Remarks. Our phylogenetic analysis ( Fig. 4
View FIGURE 4
) shows that
Cerogobius
is closely related to
Hetereleotris
, with strong support. The clade is sister to the
Gobius
-lineage sensu Agorreta et al. (2013).
Cerogobius
is morphologically clearly distinguished from
Hetereleotris
species and from genera in the
Gobius
-lineage by the combination of characters listed in the genus diagnosis. Despite high diversity and morphological variability within the
Gobius
-lineage, none of
Gobius
-lineage species have an unpaired, horn-like tentacle at snout midline, at the level of nostrils (character 1 in
Cerogobius
diagnosis), and none have suborbital transverse rows reduced to four rows (character 12) or lack row b (character 12) ( Miller 1986). The lower limb of first gill arch joined to gill cover by membrane (character 5) has to date not been reported for any
Gobius
-lineage genera except
Coryogalops
, which was mentioned without original data or references in Hoese (1986). Some of the diagnostic characters for
Cerogobius
(e.g. characters 8, 9, 10 but also others) rarely appears among species of the
Gobius
-lineage, but are never combined in a single species. The combination of 3-22110 dorsal-fin pterygiophore insertion pattern and 10 + 17 vertebral count in
Cerogobius
differentiate it from many genera in the
Gobiidae
, although several species of
Hetereleotris
, several genera in the
Gobius
-lineage (e.g.
Didogobius
,
Chromogobius
) and a few other gobiid genera also possess this combination ( Hoese 1986; Birdsong et al. 1988, table 11).
Cerogobius
shares several external characters with
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
that occur broadly across the
Gobiidae
View in CoL
and are less useful in diagnosing
Cerogobius
, and thus are not included in the present
Cerogobius
diagnosis, despite some being used to diagnose
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
by Kovačić & Bogorodsky (2014) and Kovačić et al. (2014a): broad isthmus and gill membrane attached to the base of the pectoral fin, first dorsal fin with VI spines, segmented caudal-fin rays 17; posterior nostril a tube of variable length (among
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
species only in
H. zanzibarensis ( Smith 1958)
View in CoL
posterior nostril subtubular).
Cerogobius
also shares with
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
characters that are rare in
Gobiidae
View in CoL
but not exclusive only to
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
and
Cerogobius
: pelvic fins completely separated and without frenum (only
Hetereleotris zanzibarensis
View in CoL
exhibits variability in this character); head and body completely scaleless (some species of
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
are scaled or partly scaled), no head canals (there are head canals in some species of
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
) (characters 7, 8, 9, 10 in
Cerogobius
diagnosis respectively). At present, without new data of sufficient quality for these characters from many other
Gobiidae
View in CoL
genera, synapomorphies that are unique for
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
and
Cerogobius
are: lower limb of first gill arch joined to gill cover by membrane and the suborbital papillae pattern with four transverse suborbital rows (present in all
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
species with described or illustrated cephalic sensory systems, except
H. georgegilli
View in CoL
with six rows) (character 5 and the part of character 12 in
Cerogobius
diagnosis).
Cerogobius
differs from all species presently recognized in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
(except
H. tentaculata (Smith 1958))
View in CoL
by the following: unpaired horn-like tentacle at the level of nostrils in the middle of snout ( Fig. 1A
View FIGURE 1
) vs. no horn-like tentacle on snout in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
; snout with steep profile in lateral view and very short, about 0.4–0.5 of eye diameter vs. snout moderately steep and always longer than half of eye diameter in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
; orbit projecting forward and elevated above dorsal profile vs. orbit not projecting forward and only slightly elevated above dorsal profile in some species of
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
; mouth moderately large, posterior angle of jaws behind vertical at posterior edge of eye vs. posterior angle of jaws below eye; caudal peduncle deep and short, the depth greater than its length vs. caudal peduncle depth clearly less than length in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
; suborbital rows of sensory papillae with row b absent vs. row b present in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
; four very short transverse suborbital rows of sensory papillae, row 2 distant from eye, close to row d, rows 3 and 4 close to posteroventral edge of eye and distant from row d vs. four transverse suborbital rows well developed over cheek, and row 3 always close and perpendicular to row d in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
; oculoscapular rows reduced, with only x 1 of more than 2 papillae ( Fig. 2
View FIGURE 2
) vs. more than one oculoscapular rows with several papillae in
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
(characters 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, part of 12, 13 from
Cerogobius
diagnosis respectively; note that only seven
Hetereleotris
View in CoL
species had available data or at least rough illustration of lateral line system).
Cerogobius
is similar to
H. tentaculata
View in CoL
in the shape of head (i.e. head with very short snout, orbit far forward, and posterior angle of mouth behind a vertical at posterior edge of eye), having a scaleless head and body, and in having a short and deep caudal peduncle. It differs from
H. tentaculata
View in CoL
in having an unpaired horn-like tentacle at the level of nostrils on snout midline ( Fig. 1A
View FIGURE 1
) vs. no tentacle on snout in
H. tentaculata
View in CoL
; no cirri or tentacles above eye vs. large fleshy tentacle above each eye, 0.8 of eye diameter, with trilobate apex in
H. tentaculata
View in CoL
; head canals absent vs. head canals present in
H. tentaculata
View in CoL
; posterior nostril a short tube, shorter than anterior nostril vs. posterior tube elongate, much longer than anterior nostril, about half eye diameter in
H. tentaculata
View in CoL
. The two species also differ in fin meristics, morphometrics, and coloration.