Apogonichthyini Snodgrass & Heller 1905

Mabuchi, Kohji, Fraser, Thomas H., Song, Hayeun, Azuma, Yoichiro & Nishida, Mutsumi, 2014, Revision of the systematics of the cardinalfishes (Percomorpha: Apogonidae) based on molecular analyses and comparative reevaluation of morphological characters, Zootaxa 3846 (2), pp. 151-203 : 178

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3846.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3844E8F1-A20C-44B4-9B47-B170F5A7C0C2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5119411

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CA3F4E7D-8103-0B08-FF78-C42EFE21D11C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Apogonichthyini Snodgrass & Heller 1905
status

 

Tribe Apogonichthyini Snodgrass & Heller 1905

Type genus Apogonichthys Bleeker 1854a View in CoL

Diagnosis. Members of the Apogoninae : dorsal fin VII(I) or VIII+I,7–10; anal fin II,7–9; head and body with ctenoid scales; pored lateral-line scales, 3–24, scales not pored with groove or pit in scale; preopercle smooth on ridge, serrate or smooth on edges, where smooth a narrow weakly ossified to unossified flap; three supraneurals; supramaxilla narrow, reduced or absent; basisphenoid reduced or absent; one pair of uroneurals present; three epurals; five free hypurals or 1–2 fused and 3–4 fused, one or more fused to terminal centrum; free parhypural; caudal fin emarginate, truncate or rounded; head and body reddish, brownish or blackish without stripes, often with pale or dark spots on body.

Other characteristics. two supernumerary spines; branched first segmented dorsal and anal ray; ctenoid scales on predorsal, cheek, breast, two pelvic scales, and body; ctenoid scale on opercle and onto base of caudal fin; pored lateral-line scales simple with one pore on upper side and one on lower side; pectoral fin-rays 11–16; three supraneurals; 9+8 segmented principal caudal rays, 15 branched, upper and lower unbranched; unbranched procurrent rays, longest segmented; teeth on premaxilla, dentary, vomer, palatine, all villiform (one species present on ectopterygoid) or absent on palatine; six infraorbitals, bony shelf on third infraorbital; supramaxilla absent; basisphenoid present, reduced or absent; anterior ceratohyal smooth or notched; 10+14 or 10+15 ( Vincentia ) vertebrae; 8 ribs; 8–9 epineurals; low crest on PU2.

Distribution. Apogonichthys , Foa Jordan & Evermann in Jordan & Seale 1905, are widespread throughout the Indo-Pacific from the Red Sea, East Africa to Japan, Hawaii and French Polynesia; Fowleria Jordan & Evermann 1903 and Neamia from the Red Sea, East Africa to Japan and French Polynesia; and Vincentia known from warmtemperate Australia.

Remarks. This tribe contains five genera, Apogonichthys , Neamia , Foa , Fowleria and Vincentia , almost corresponding to the clade III in the molecular trees ( Figs. 2–6 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 , Table 4 View TABLE 4 ). The last genus, Vincentia , was tentatively included in this tribe, because it was sister to the clade III in the trees of Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 and 4 View FIGURE 4 . Members are morphologically defined by the following characters: the smooth preopercle edges, rounded caudal fin, a reduced supramaxilla, and 10+14 vertebrae. Vincentia does not show these morphological features, and was sister not to the clade III, but to Glossamia in tree in Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 . Thus, Vincentia may not belong to this tribe. Species of Neamia were not part of the molecular analysis, but thought to belong to this tribe through morphological synapomorphies (smooth preopercle edges, reduced supramaxilla, rounded caudal fin and color patterns).

Apogonichthyidae has been used several times first by Snodgrass & Heller (1905) with two species of Eastern Pacific Apogon , then by Jordan & Evermann (1905) with Apogonichthys and other apogonids and again by Jordan & Seale (1905) with Amia Gronow in Gray 1854a an unavailable name for Apogon and other apogonids. No type genus was mentioned by any of these authors. Jordan and co-workers had previously used Apogonidae . The stem of Apogonichthyidae is Apogonichthy. We use the tribal name in conjunction with Apogonichthys Bleeker 1854a the source of the stem.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Apogonidae

SubFamily

Pseudamiinae

Loc

Apogonichthyini Snodgrass & Heller 1905

Mabuchi, Kohji, Fraser, Thomas H., Song, Hayeun, Azuma, Yoichiro & Nishida, Mutsumi 2014
2014
Loc

Apogonichthys

Bleeker 1854
1854
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