Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993

Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993 (Japanese name: Wakataka-hebigenge) (Figs. 17–20; Table 5) Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993: 130, figs. 1–2 (original description, type locality: off Iturup, Pacific cost of Kuril Islands); Anderson, 1994: 117 (species list); Shi...

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Main Authors: Kawarada, Shumpei, Imamura, Hisashi, Narimatsu, Yoji, Shinohara, Gento
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Published: Zenodo 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809743
https://zenodo.org/record/3809743
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3809743
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Kawarada, Shumpei
Imamura, Hisashi
Narimatsu, Yoji
Shinohara, Gento
Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
description Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993 (Japanese name: Wakataka-hebigenge) (Figs. 17–20; Table 5) Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993: 130, figs. 1–2 (original description, type locality: off Iturup, Pacific cost of Kuril Islands); Anderson, 1994: 117 (species list); Shinohara et al. , 1996: 180, fig. 2A (description); Imamura, 1997: 60 (species list); Imamura, 1998: 32, fig. 11 (brief description); Hatooka, 2000: 1032, 1590, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Hatooka, 2002: 1032, 1581, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Anderson & Fedorov, 2004: 18 (species list); Shinohara & Anderson, 2007: 63 (key to species); Kitagawa et al. , 2008: 95, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Shinohara et al. , 2009: 723 (species list); Amaoka et al. , 2011: 316, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Balushkin et al. , 2011: 981, 1024 (catalog of specimens); Hatooka, 2013: 1226, 2078, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Nakabo & Hirashima, 2015: 217 (species list and etymology of scientific name). Materials examined Holotype : ZIN 42290, 137.1 mm SL, off Iturup, Kuril Islands, northwestern Pacific (44°39.2’N, 149°02.2’E), 800 m depth, 10 Sep. 1968, R/V Vityaz , trawl. Other specimens (40 specimens, 111.2–168.7 mm SL): HUMZ 152378, 163847, 180633, 182293, 182295, 182383–89, 182395, 182478, 182480–82, 182484–85, 182487–88, 182519, 182636–44, 182646–47, 15 males and 19 females, 111.2–147.2 mm SL, Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific; HUMZ 192427 (4), 196342, 226078, 5 males and 1 females, 133.7–168.7 mm SL, eastern Hokkaido Island, northwestern Pacific. Diagnosis. Vertebrae 24–26 + 107–113 = 132–139; head 10.0–12.9% SL; interorbital pore 1; occipital pore usually 1; postorbital pores 4; suborbital pores usually 7 + 1; preoperculomandibular pores usually 10; vomerine teeth 4–13; palatine teeth 5–12, arranged in single row; opercular flap well developed; pelvic-fin base positioned anterior to lower edge of gill opening; lateral line incomplete and positioned ventrally; scales present or absent on pectoral fin and absent on its base; body uniformly grayish brown when fresh. Description. Counts and proportional measurements in Table 5. Body strongly elongate, cross section oval anteriorly, compressed laterally near tail; its width at anal-fin origin 2.1–3.6% SL (unknown for holotype). Head very short, ovoid, dorsal profile of head gently sloping from above posterior edge of eye to about above last postorbital pore. No sexual dimorphism in head recognized. Snout short, 103.3–162.8 (152.2)% of eye diameter. Eye ovoid, relatively small. Interorbital space narrow, width 10.0–43.5 (43.5)% of eye diameter. Nostril tube short, quite not reaching upper lip when depressed. Mouth subterminal. Posterior edge of upper jaw reaching about to about vertical through anterior margin of pupil in adult males, not reaching vertical through anterior margin of pupil in females and juveniles. Labial lobe of lower jaw weak. Teeth on jaws sharp, anterior teeth large and posterior teeth small; upper jaw with single row, sometimes having additional small teeth behind anteriormost tooth (unknown for holotype); lower jaw with 2–3 irregular rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly; vomerine teeth large and conical, arranged irregularly; palatine teeth smaller than vomerine teeth, arranged in single row. Lower edge of gill opening slightly above lower end of pectoral-fin base. Opercular flap well developed. Gill rakers short and triangular (Fig. 18). Pseudobranch filaments short. Lateral line deciduous, incomplete and positioned ventrally; originating posterior to 5th postorbital pore terminating its end area above about middle of anal fin. Scales small and cycloid, present on body and tail. Scales covering basal portions of dorsal and anal fins anteriorly; extent of scaled areas gradually increasing posteriorly, except at margins. Scales present or absent on pectoral axilla and basal portions of lower pectoral-fin rays (unknown for holotype). Head, nape and pectoral-fin base without scales. ....Continued next page Dorsal-fin origin above middle of pectoral fin; 1st dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 3rd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) vertebrae. Anal-fin origin below 20th to 22nd (20th) dorsal-fin ray; 1st anal-fin pterygiophore posterior to parapophysis of ultimate or penultimate (penultimate) abdominal vertebra. Last dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 2nd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) preural vertebrae. Last anal-fin pterygiophore between hemal spines of 2nd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) preural vertebrae. Caudal fin with 2 epurals, 4 upper hypurals and 3–5 (5) lower hypural rays. Pectoral fin moderately short, not quite reaching middle of abdomen; its posterior margin having notches. Upper end of pectoral-fin base about on lateral midline of body. Pelvic fin short; its base anterior to lower edge of gill opening; its posterior margin not reaching vertical through pectoral-fin base. Head pores well developed and distinct. Nasal pores 2; anterior pore in front of nostril tube, posterior pore above 1st suborbital pore (Fig. 20A, B). Postorbital pores 4; distance between 1st and 2nd pores longest of those between adjacent pores (Fig. 20A, B). Suborbital pores usually 8 (8), rarely 9; 7 pores located below eye and last pore posterior to eye; when 9 pores, 8 pores below eye and 9th behind eye on left side in HUMZ 182639 and on right side in HUMZ 182293; 5th below anterior margin of pupil; last pore of those below eye located posterior to vertical posterior to margin of eye (Fig. 20A). Preoperculomandibular pores usually 10 (10), rarely 9; 5 on lower jaw, 2 at junction of lower jaw and preopercle, and 3 on preopercle; 8th and 9th pores united into 1 pore on left side of HUMZ 182479 and counted as 9; last preoperculomandibular pore located posterior to lower margin of eye (Fig. 20A, C). One interorbital pore located on dorsal midline anterior to anterior margin of pupils (Fig. 20B). Usually 1 occipital pore located on dorsal midline at middle of occiput (1); 1 additional pore present on left side of middle pore in HUMZ 182640; 2 additional pores, one on either side of middle pore in HUMZ 182642; occipital pore(s) located anterior to 3rd postorbital pore (Fig. 20B). Color in alcohol. Holotype (based on color photograph; Fig. 19) with uniformly light brown head, body and vertical fins, slightly paler pectoral fin; dark brown opercular region; purplish gray abdomen. Margin of vertical fins in non-type specimens dark brown, but coloration otherwise similar to holotype. Color when fresh (based on color photograph of HUMZ 152378; Fig. 17). Head and margin of vertical fins dark brown; body and vertical fins uniformly grayish brown; pectoral fins gray; abdomen dark purplish gray. Distribution. Off northwestern Pacific coast of the Kuril Islands, eastern Hokkaido Island and Honshu Island from Miyagi to Ibaraki prefectures, at depths of 399–1219 m (Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993; Anderson, 1994; Shinohara et al. , 1996; Imamura, 1997, 1998; Hatooka, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson & Fedorov, 2004; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; Kitagawa et al. , 2008; Shinohara et al. , 2009; Amaoka et al. , 2011; Balushkin et al. , 2011; this study). Size. Maximum length 180 mm TL (Amaoka et al. , 2011; Hatooka, 2013). The largest specimen examined for this study measured 168.7 mm SL (172.2 mm TL). Remarks. Lycenchelys makushok resembles L. hippopotamus , L. melanostomias and L. rassi in having more than 100 total vertebrae, 1 interorbital pore, 1–3 occipital pores, 4 postorbital pores, a single ventral lateral line and no distinct spots or blotches on the body (vs. lacking this combination of this characters in other species of Lycenchelys ) (e.g., Toyoshima, 1983, 1985; Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993; Hatooka, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson, 1995; Shinohara et al. , 1996; Imamura et al. , 2004; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; this study). See Remarks for L. hippopotamus for a detailed comparison of L. makushok and L. hippopotamus . Lycenchelys makushok is separable from L. melanostomias and L. rassi by the number and position of occipital pores. Lycenchelys makushok always has an occipital pore on the dorsal midline at the middle of the occiput. When 2 or 3 occipital pores are present (2 of 41 specimens observed in this study), the additional pore or two are on the lateral side or sides of the middle pore. In contrast, L. melanostomias and L. rassi usually have 2 occipital pores (1 occipital pore on right side was examined in only 1 specimen of L. melanostomias in this study), that are located on the left and right sides of the midline of the occiput. Lycenchelys makushok is further separable from L. melanostomias in having a higher number of total vertebrae (132–139, vs. 117–124, respectively), and from L. rassi in having a shorter head (head length 10.0–12.9% SL, vs. 13.4–16.4% SL, respectively). : Published as part of Kawarada, Shumpei, Imamura, Hisashi, Narimatsu, Yoji & Shinohara, Gento, 2020, Taxonomic revision of the genus Lycenchelys (Osteichthyes: Zoarcidae) in Japanese waters, pp. 1-66 in Zootaxa 4762 (1) on pages 23-27, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3743698 : {"references": ["Fedorov, V. V. & Andriashev, A. P. (1993) Lycenchelys makushok sp. nova (Perciformes: Zoarcidae) from the bathyal depths of the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench. Journal of Ichthyology, 33, 130 - 135.", "Anderson, M. E. (1994) Systematics and osteology of the Zoarcidae (Teleostei: Perciformes). Ichthyological Bulletin of the J. L. B. Smith Institute of Ichthyology, 60, 1 - 120.", "Shinohara, G., Endo, H. & Matsuura, K. (1996) Deep-water Fishes collection from the Pacific coast of northern Honshu, Japan. Memories of the National Science Museum, Tokyo, 29, 153 - 185.", "Imamura, H. (1997) Perciform fish fauna from off Pacific of Tohoku. Researches on Basic Fishes in Tohoku District, 17, 55 - 68. [in Japanese]", "Imamura, H. (1998) Zoarcid fishes occurring off Pacific of Tohoku District. Researches on Basic Fishes in Tohoku District, 18, 28 - 34. [in Japanese]", "Hatooka, K. (2000) Zoarcidae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with pictorial keys to the species. 2 nd edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 1028 - 1044 + 1590 - 1593. [in Japanese]", "Hatooka, K. (2002) Zoarcidae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with pictorial keys to the species, English edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 1028 - 1044 + 1581 - 1583.", "Anderson, M. E. & Fedorov, V. V. (2004) Family Zoarcidae Swainson, 1839 eelpouts. California Academy of Sciences, Annotated Checklists of Fishes, 34, 1 - 58.", "Shinohara, G. & Anderson, M. E. (2007) Lycenchelys ryukyuensis sp. nov. (Perciformes: Zoarcidae) from the Okinawa Trough, Japan. Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science, Series A (Zoology), Supplement 1, 59 - 66.", "Kitagawa, D., Imamura, H., Goto, T., Ishito, Y., Fujiwara, K. & Ueda, Y. (2008) Field guide of the fishes from the Tohoku District, north-eastern waters of Japan. Tokai University Press, Hadano, 141 pp. [in Japanese]", "Shinohara, G., Narimatsu, Y., Hattori, T., Ito, M., Takata, Y. & Matsuura, K. (2009) Annotated checklist of deep-sea fishes from the Pacific coast off Tohoku District, Japan. In: Fujita, T. (Ed.), Deep-sea fauna and pollutants off Pacific coast of northern Japan. National Science Museum of Nature and Science Monographs, Tokyo, 39, pp. 683 - 735.", "Amaoka, K., Nakaya, K. & Yabe, M. (2011) Fishes of Hokkaido. The Hokkaido Shimbun Press, Sapporo, 482 pp. [in Japanese]", "Balushkin, A. V., Sheiko, B. A. & Fedorov, V. V. (2011) Catalog of archival collection of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences: class Osteichthyes (bony fishes), order Perciformes, family Zoarcidae. Journal of Ichthyology, 51, 950 - 1034. https: // doi. org / 10.1134 / S 0032945211100031", "Hatooka, K. (2013) Zoarcidae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with pictorial keys to the species. 3 rd edition. Tokai Uni- versity Press, Hadano, pp. 1220 - 1237 + 2076 - 2082. [in Japanese]", "Nakabo, T. & Hirashima, Y. (2015) Scientific names of Japanese fishes: etymology. Tokai University Press, Hadano, xv + 372 pp. [in Japanese]", "Toyoshima, M. (1983) Zoarcidae. In: Amaoka, K., Nakaya, K., Araya, H. & Yasui, T. (Eds.), Fishes from the north-eastern Sea of Japan and the Okhotsk Sea off Hokkaido. The intensive research of unexploited fishery resources on continental slopes. Japan Fisheries Resource Conservation Association, Tokyo, pp. 136 - 149 + 208 - 210 + 258 - 277 + 329 - 335.", "Toyoshima, M. (1985) Taxonomy of the subfamily Lycodinae (family Zoarcidae) in Japan and adjacent waters. Memoirs of the Faculty of Fisheries, Hokkaido University, 32, 131 - 243.", "Hatooka, K. (1993) Zoarcidae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with pictorial keys to the species. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 898 - 913 + 1343 - 1345. [in Japanese]", "Anderson, M. E. (1995) The eelpout genera Lycenchelys Gill and Taranetzella Andriashev (Teleostei: Zoarcidae) in the eastern Pacific, with descriptions of nine new species. Proceedings of the California Academy of Science, 49, 55 - 133.", "Imamura, H., Machida, Y. & Ohta, S. (2004) Lycenchelys melanostomias Toyoshima, 1983, a senior synonym of L. brevimaxillaris Toyoshima, 1985 (Teleostei: Zoarcidae). Ichthyological Research, 51, 84 - 88. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 10228 - 003 - 0194 - 2"]}
format Text
author Kawarada, Shumpei
Imamura, Hisashi
Narimatsu, Yoji
Shinohara, Gento
author_facet Kawarada, Shumpei
Imamura, Hisashi
Narimatsu, Yoji
Shinohara, Gento
author_sort Kawarada, Shumpei
title Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993
title_short Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993
title_full Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993
title_fullStr Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993
title_full_unstemmed Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993
title_sort lycenchelys makushok fedorov & andriashev 1993
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809743
https://zenodo.org/record/3809743
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.213,-66.213,-66.445,-66.445)
geographic Okhotsk
Pacific
Nakaya
geographic_facet Okhotsk
Pacific
Nakaya
genre Kamchatka
okhotsk sea
genre_facet Kamchatka
okhotsk sea
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3809743 2023-05-15T16:59:35+02:00 Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev 1993 Kawarada, Shumpei Imamura, Hisashi Narimatsu, Yoji Shinohara, Gento 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809743 https://zenodo.org/record/3809743 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/3743698 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FC552662FF91FF9C3E51B149FFD8AA32 http://zoobank.org/BEBD8F0D-1347-4A44-86D4-2915433D2E7B https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/3743698 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FC552662FF91FF9C3E51B149FFD8AA32 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743734 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743736 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743738 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743740 http://zoobank.org/BEBD8F0D-1347-4A44-86D4-2915433D2E7B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809742 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809743 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743734 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743736 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743738 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743740 https: 2022-02-09T14:14:30Z Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993 (Japanese name: Wakataka-hebigenge) (Figs. 17–20; Table 5) Lycenchelys makushok Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993: 130, figs. 1–2 (original description, type locality: off Iturup, Pacific cost of Kuril Islands); Anderson, 1994: 117 (species list); Shinohara et al. , 1996: 180, fig. 2A (description); Imamura, 1997: 60 (species list); Imamura, 1998: 32, fig. 11 (brief description); Hatooka, 2000: 1032, 1590, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Hatooka, 2002: 1032, 1581, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Anderson & Fedorov, 2004: 18 (species list); Shinohara & Anderson, 2007: 63 (key to species); Kitagawa et al. , 2008: 95, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Shinohara et al. , 2009: 723 (species list); Amaoka et al. , 2011: 316, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Balushkin et al. , 2011: 981, 1024 (catalog of specimens); Hatooka, 2013: 1226, 2078, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Nakabo & Hirashima, 2015: 217 (species list and etymology of scientific name). Materials examined Holotype : ZIN 42290, 137.1 mm SL, off Iturup, Kuril Islands, northwestern Pacific (44°39.2’N, 149°02.2’E), 800 m depth, 10 Sep. 1968, R/V Vityaz , trawl. Other specimens (40 specimens, 111.2–168.7 mm SL): HUMZ 152378, 163847, 180633, 182293, 182295, 182383–89, 182395, 182478, 182480–82, 182484–85, 182487–88, 182519, 182636–44, 182646–47, 15 males and 19 females, 111.2–147.2 mm SL, Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific; HUMZ 192427 (4), 196342, 226078, 5 males and 1 females, 133.7–168.7 mm SL, eastern Hokkaido Island, northwestern Pacific. Diagnosis. Vertebrae 24–26 + 107–113 = 132–139; head 10.0–12.9% SL; interorbital pore 1; occipital pore usually 1; postorbital pores 4; suborbital pores usually 7 + 1; preoperculomandibular pores usually 10; vomerine teeth 4–13; palatine teeth 5–12, arranged in single row; opercular flap well developed; pelvic-fin base positioned anterior to lower edge of gill opening; lateral line incomplete and positioned ventrally; scales present or absent on pectoral fin and absent on its base; body uniformly grayish brown when fresh. Description. Counts and proportional measurements in Table 5. Body strongly elongate, cross section oval anteriorly, compressed laterally near tail; its width at anal-fin origin 2.1–3.6% SL (unknown for holotype). Head very short, ovoid, dorsal profile of head gently sloping from above posterior edge of eye to about above last postorbital pore. No sexual dimorphism in head recognized. Snout short, 103.3–162.8 (152.2)% of eye diameter. Eye ovoid, relatively small. Interorbital space narrow, width 10.0–43.5 (43.5)% of eye diameter. Nostril tube short, quite not reaching upper lip when depressed. Mouth subterminal. Posterior edge of upper jaw reaching about to about vertical through anterior margin of pupil in adult males, not reaching vertical through anterior margin of pupil in females and juveniles. Labial lobe of lower jaw weak. Teeth on jaws sharp, anterior teeth large and posterior teeth small; upper jaw with single row, sometimes having additional small teeth behind anteriormost tooth (unknown for holotype); lower jaw with 2–3 irregular rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly; vomerine teeth large and conical, arranged irregularly; palatine teeth smaller than vomerine teeth, arranged in single row. Lower edge of gill opening slightly above lower end of pectoral-fin base. Opercular flap well developed. Gill rakers short and triangular (Fig. 18). Pseudobranch filaments short. Lateral line deciduous, incomplete and positioned ventrally; originating posterior to 5th postorbital pore terminating its end area above about middle of anal fin. Scales small and cycloid, present on body and tail. Scales covering basal portions of dorsal and anal fins anteriorly; extent of scaled areas gradually increasing posteriorly, except at margins. Scales present or absent on pectoral axilla and basal portions of lower pectoral-fin rays (unknown for holotype). Head, nape and pectoral-fin base without scales. ....Continued next page Dorsal-fin origin above middle of pectoral fin; 1st dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 3rd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) vertebrae. Anal-fin origin below 20th to 22nd (20th) dorsal-fin ray; 1st anal-fin pterygiophore posterior to parapophysis of ultimate or penultimate (penultimate) abdominal vertebra. Last dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 2nd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) preural vertebrae. Last anal-fin pterygiophore between hemal spines of 2nd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) preural vertebrae. Caudal fin with 2 epurals, 4 upper hypurals and 3–5 (5) lower hypural rays. Pectoral fin moderately short, not quite reaching middle of abdomen; its posterior margin having notches. Upper end of pectoral-fin base about on lateral midline of body. Pelvic fin short; its base anterior to lower edge of gill opening; its posterior margin not reaching vertical through pectoral-fin base. Head pores well developed and distinct. Nasal pores 2; anterior pore in front of nostril tube, posterior pore above 1st suborbital pore (Fig. 20A, B). Postorbital pores 4; distance between 1st and 2nd pores longest of those between adjacent pores (Fig. 20A, B). Suborbital pores usually 8 (8), rarely 9; 7 pores located below eye and last pore posterior to eye; when 9 pores, 8 pores below eye and 9th behind eye on left side in HUMZ 182639 and on right side in HUMZ 182293; 5th below anterior margin of pupil; last pore of those below eye located posterior to vertical posterior to margin of eye (Fig. 20A). Preoperculomandibular pores usually 10 (10), rarely 9; 5 on lower jaw, 2 at junction of lower jaw and preopercle, and 3 on preopercle; 8th and 9th pores united into 1 pore on left side of HUMZ 182479 and counted as 9; last preoperculomandibular pore located posterior to lower margin of eye (Fig. 20A, C). One interorbital pore located on dorsal midline anterior to anterior margin of pupils (Fig. 20B). Usually 1 occipital pore located on dorsal midline at middle of occiput (1); 1 additional pore present on left side of middle pore in HUMZ 182640; 2 additional pores, one on either side of middle pore in HUMZ 182642; occipital pore(s) located anterior to 3rd postorbital pore (Fig. 20B). Color in alcohol. Holotype (based on color photograph; Fig. 19) with uniformly light brown head, body and vertical fins, slightly paler pectoral fin; dark brown opercular region; purplish gray abdomen. Margin of vertical fins in non-type specimens dark brown, but coloration otherwise similar to holotype. Color when fresh (based on color photograph of HUMZ 152378; Fig. 17). Head and margin of vertical fins dark brown; body and vertical fins uniformly grayish brown; pectoral fins gray; abdomen dark purplish gray. Distribution. Off northwestern Pacific coast of the Kuril Islands, eastern Hokkaido Island and Honshu Island from Miyagi to Ibaraki prefectures, at depths of 399–1219 m (Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993; Anderson, 1994; Shinohara et al. , 1996; Imamura, 1997, 1998; Hatooka, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson & Fedorov, 2004; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; Kitagawa et al. , 2008; Shinohara et al. , 2009; Amaoka et al. , 2011; Balushkin et al. , 2011; this study). Size. Maximum length 180 mm TL (Amaoka et al. , 2011; Hatooka, 2013). The largest specimen examined for this study measured 168.7 mm SL (172.2 mm TL). Remarks. Lycenchelys makushok resembles L. hippopotamus , L. melanostomias and L. rassi in having more than 100 total vertebrae, 1 interorbital pore, 1–3 occipital pores, 4 postorbital pores, a single ventral lateral line and no distinct spots or blotches on the body (vs. lacking this combination of this characters in other species of Lycenchelys ) (e.g., Toyoshima, 1983, 1985; Fedorov & Andriashev, 1993; Hatooka, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson, 1995; Shinohara et al. , 1996; Imamura et al. , 2004; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; this study). See Remarks for L. hippopotamus for a detailed comparison of L. makushok and L. hippopotamus . Lycenchelys makushok is separable from L. melanostomias and L. rassi by the number and position of occipital pores. Lycenchelys makushok always has an occipital pore on the dorsal midline at the middle of the occiput. When 2 or 3 occipital pores are present (2 of 41 specimens observed in this study), the additional pore or two are on the lateral side or sides of the middle pore. In contrast, L. melanostomias and L. rassi usually have 2 occipital pores (1 occipital pore on right side was examined in only 1 specimen of L. melanostomias in this study), that are located on the left and right sides of the midline of the occiput. Lycenchelys makushok is further separable from L. melanostomias in having a higher number of total vertebrae (132–139, vs. 117–124, respectively), and from L. rassi in having a shorter head (head length 10.0–12.9% SL, vs. 13.4–16.4% SL, respectively). : Published as part of Kawarada, Shumpei, Imamura, Hisashi, Narimatsu, Yoji & Shinohara, Gento, 2020, Taxonomic revision of the genus Lycenchelys (Osteichthyes: Zoarcidae) in Japanese waters, pp. 1-66 in Zootaxa 4762 (1) on pages 23-27, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3743698 : {"references": ["Fedorov, V. 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Proceedings of the California Academy of Science, 49, 55 - 133.", "Imamura, H., Machida, Y. & Ohta, S. (2004) Lycenchelys melanostomias Toyoshima, 1983, a senior synonym of L. brevimaxillaris Toyoshima, 1985 (Teleostei: Zoarcidae). Ichthyological Research, 51, 84 - 88. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 10228 - 003 - 0194 - 2"]} Text Kamchatka okhotsk sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Okhotsk Pacific Nakaya ENVELOPE(-66.213,-66.213,-66.445,-66.445)