Gymnothorax cinerascens ( Rüppell 1830 )

Smith, David G., Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Mal, Ahmad O. & Alpermann, Tilman J., 2019, Review of the moray eels (Anguilliformes: Muraenidae) of the Red Sea, with description of a new species, Zootaxa 4704 (1), pp. 1-87 : 22-25

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4704.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0AF043C6-38E4-4546-A7FB-C43BAC5A9837

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A84F87BC-FF94-693F-FF5A-FCD6FE4FFDC7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gymnothorax cinerascens ( Rüppell 1830 )
status

 

Gymnothorax cinerascens ( Rüppell 1830) View in CoL —Plain Moray

( Figures 11 View FIGURE 11 , 12 View FIGURE 12 , 19 View FIGURE 19 , 20 View FIGURE 20 )

Muraena cinerascens Rüppell 1830: 120 View in CoL ( Mohila , Red Sea). Holotype (unique), SMF 3486 About SMF .

Gymnothorax hepatica: Bamber 1915: 478 View in CoL (part?).

Gymnothorax hepaticus View in CoL (non Rüppell): Clark et al. 1968: 21 (part?); Goren & Dor 1994: 7 (part?); Randall & Golani 1995: 859, fig. 3; Golani & Bogorodsky 2010: 10 (part?); Golani & Fricke 2018: 21 (part?).

Lycodontis hepaticus: Dor 1984: 28 View in CoL (part?).

Gymnothorax monochrous View in CoL (non Bleeker): Khalaf 2004: 36 (part?).

Red Sea material. Red Sea: SMF 3486 About SMF (1, 475, holotype) ; SMF185 About SMF (2 of 3, 176–253). Egypt : USNM 166913 About USNM (1, 445), Ghardaqa (Hurghada) . Sudan: BPBM 20758 About BPBM (3, 225–385), Suakin Archipelago . Saudi Arabia: KAUMM 395 [ KAU12-290 ] (1, 603), Farasan Archipelago ; KAUMM 396 [ KAU13-643 ] (1, 376), Al Khoreybah ; KAUMM 397 ( KAU13-116 ) (1, 755), Al Wajh bank ; SMF 185 About SMF (2 of originally 3, 178–253), Al Muwaylih ; SMF 35808 [ KAU12-016 ] (1, 675), Farasan Archipelago ; SMF 35809 [ KAU12-247 ] (1, 234), Farasan Archipelago ; SMF 35810 [ KAU12-416 ] (1, 890), Farasan Archipelago ; SMF 35828 [ KAU12-1085 ] (1, 191), Jeddah , Obhur ; SMF 35875 [ KAU17-157 ] (1, 569), Dumsuk I., 6– 10 m. Eritrea, Dahlak Archipelago : USNM 312570 About USNM (1, 496), Difnein Island ; USNM 312571 About USNM (4, 309–450), Sciumma Island ; USNM 446881 About USNM (16, 221–592), Delemmi ; USNM 312569 About USNM (3, 301–795), Melita Bay .

Diagnosis. Moderate-size moray, moderate in length and depth, tail relatively slender, head behind eye slightly elevated. Preanal length 2.0– 2.2 in TL. Third intermaxillary tooth close to vertical at anterior margin of eye. Vomerine teeth biserial in adults. Head and body plain brown without markings; margin of dorsal and anal fins yellowish to yellow at tip of tail. Vertebrae 5–6 / 55–57 / 128–135.

Description. In TL: preanal length 2.0–2.2, predorsal length 7.5–10.4, head length 6.2–8.1, body depth at anus 15–23. In head length: snout length 5.3–6.6, eye diameter 8.6–13.8, upper-jaw length 2.2–3.6. Pores: LL 2, SO 3, IO 4, POM 6. Vertebrae: predorsal 5–6, preanal 55–57, total 128–135.

Body moderately elongate; anus at or slightly before midlength; dorsal-fin origin before gill opening; height of dorsal fin about one-third body depth. Jaws slender, of equal length, may be slightly hooked. Eye moderate, over middle of upper jaw. Anterior nostril tubular; posterior nostril with a raised rim, above anterior margin of eye. Third infraorbital pore slightly behind level of anterior margin of eye.

Teeth smooth, slender and pointed or blade-like. Intermaxillary teeth long and slender, in a single peripheral series, 3–6 on each side sometimes with a few much smaller teeth between; three slender, depressible median teeth; third intermaxillary tooth close to vertical through anterior margin of eye, ratio between distance from third intermaxillary tooth to tip of snout and distance from same tooth to anterior margin of eye 3.2–12.6. Maxilla with about 10–18 triangular teeth in a single row in large adults, smaller specimens with 1–3 larger inner teeth anteriorly. Dentary with 1–4 larger inner teeth and about 12–22 smaller outer teeth. Vomerine teeth biserial in adults, uniserial in young.

Color: body and fins dark brown, fins with yellow margin at tip of tail, yellowish or yellow more obscure with growth. Throat grooves darker brown. Head pores with a narrow dark margin. Iris in life reddish brown. Some smaller specimens light grayish brown with scattered dark markings.

Maximum size at least 890 mm.

Distribution and habitat. Known with certainty only from the Red Sea, where it occurs primarily in turbid, silty water, on dead reefs, and in sheltered areas at depths of 1– 20 m. More common in the southern part of the Red Sea than in the north.

Remarks. This species has long been considered a synonym of Muraena hepatica Rüppell , but our studies indicate that it is distinct, based on both morphological and genetic characters. The holotype of M. cinerascens actually belongs to the species most commonly reported as Gymnothorax hepaticus . The true G. hepaticus has been redefined; see the account of that species for a more detailed explanation of the differences between the two species. Two of the specimens, SMF 35828 and SMF 35875 differ somewhat in their color pattern from the others ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ). In preservative, they are medium brownish gray with scattered black markings. In life, SMF 35828 is pale brown speckled with dark brown, with edge of fins pale yellow. The live colors of SMF 35875 were not recorded, but it belongs to the same COI lineage as the other specimens of G. cinerascens (see Fig. 48 View FIGURE 48 ), and we treat it here as an aberrant color pattern of that species. SMF 35828 was not tissue-sampled, but it agrees in most other characters, and we are placing it in this species. The specimens in SMF 185 were originally labeled as syntypes of Muraena cinerascens , but Böhlke & Smith (2002) showed that they are not. They were listed by Rüppell (1852) as Muraena cinerascens var. umbrina but without a description or a reference to a description, leaving the name as a nomen nudum, hence unavailable. SMF 185 contains three specimens; two of them are G. cinerascens and one is G. hepaticus (now SMF 35879).

For the phylogenetic analysis, no sequences of G. hepaticus from other regions could be identified. The four sequences from the Red Sea showed very little variation and the next closely related species are G. fimbriatus (Bennett) and an undescribed species of Gymnothorax with collection locality Red Sea ( Israel, Gymnothorax sp. 5), with which G. hepaticus was placed on a joint branch with moderately high bootstrap support.

Previous records of Gymnothorax hepaticus in the Red Sea undoubtedly include G. cinerascens . These specimens would have to be re-examined to determine their true identity. We can confirm that BPBM 20758 belongs to G. cinerascens because Randall & Golani (1995, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ) included a photograph of one of the specimens. It appears to be more common than the true G. hepaticus . It is uncertain whether it occurs outside the Red Sea.

Gymnothorax cinerascens has rarely been mentioned in the literature. Klunzinger (1871: 615) included it (as Muraena cinerascens ) as a synonym of Muraena undulata , although he suggested that it might be a separate species. However, he described it as having broad crossbands (“ Körper mit breiten Querbändern”), and it is obviously not Rüppell’s species.

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Anguilliformes

Family

Muraenidae

SubFamily

Muraeninae

Genus

Gymnothorax

Loc

Gymnothorax cinerascens ( Rüppell 1830 )

Smith, David G., Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Mal, Ahmad O. & Alpermann, Tilman J. 2019
2019
Loc

Gymnothorax monochrous

Khalaf, M. A. 2004: 36
2004
Loc

Lycodontis hepaticus:

Dor, M. 1984: 28
1984
Loc

Gymnothorax hepaticus

Golani, D. & Fricke, R. 2018: 21
Golani, D. & Bogorodsky, S. V. 2010: 10
Randall, J. E. & Golani, D. 1995: 859
Goren, M. & Dor, M. 1994: 7
Clark, E. & Ben-Tuvia, A. & Steinitz, H. 1968: 21
1968
Loc

Gymnothorax hepatica: Bamber 1915: 478

Bamber, R. C. 1915: 478
1915
Loc

Muraena cinerascens Rüppell 1830: 120

Ruppell, W. P. E. S. 1830: 120
1830
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