Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983
Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima, 1983 (Japanese name: Uroko-hebigenge) (Figs. 38–43; Table 10) Lycenchelys squamosus Toyoshima, 1983: 145, figs. 20–22, table 10, pl. 93 (original description, type locality: off Miyagi Prefecture, Pacific coast of Honshu Island, Japan); Toyoshima, 1984: 293, pl. 274-E...
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Biodiversity Taxonomy Kawarada, Shumpei Imamura, Hisashi Narimatsu, Yoji Shinohara, Gento Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983 |
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Biodiversity Taxonomy |
description |
Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima, 1983 (Japanese name: Uroko-hebigenge) (Figs. 38–43; Table 10) Lycenchelys squamosus Toyoshima, 1983: 145, figs. 20–22, table 10, pl. 93 (original description, type locality: off Miyagi Prefecture, Pacific coast of Honshu Island, Japan); Toyoshima, 1984: 293, pl. 274-E (brief description); Toyoshma, 1985: 156, figs. 6–7, 12–13, 31, table 1 (description); Hatooka, 1993: 901, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Amaoka et al. , 1995: 241, pl. 405 (brief description); Koyanagi, 1997: 538, fig. 5 (brief description); Imamura, 1998: 32, fig. 13 (brief description); Zama, 2001: 86, 133 (species list). Lycenchelys squamosa : Anderson, 1994: 113, 118 (species list); Shinohara et al. , 1996: 182 (species list); Imamura, 1997: 60 (species list); Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998: table 1 (comparison with Lycenchelys aurantiaca ); Hatooka, 2000: 1033, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Hatooka, 2002: 1033, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Anderson & Fedorov, 2004: 20 (species list); Shiogaki et al. , 2004: 71 (species list); Shinohara & Anderson, 2007: 64 (key to species); Kitagawa et al. , 2008: 96, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Shinohara et al. , 2009: 724 (species list); Amaoka et al. , 2011: 318, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Balushkin et al. , 2011: 983 (catalog of specimens); Hatooka, 2013: 1227, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Nakabo & Hirashima, 2015: 217 (species list and etymology of scientific name). Materials examined Holotype : HUMZ 78464, male, 246.1 mm SL, off Miyagi Prefecture, Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific (37°49.7’N, 142°23.7’E to 37°55.4’N, 142°24.5’E), 985–1005 m depth, 8 Oct. 1978. Paratypes (2 specimens, 193.0– 222.5 mm SL, both from Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific): HUMZ 72563, 1 female, 193.0 mm SL, off Fukushima Prefecture (37°09.4’N, 141°56E), 900–920 m depth, 19 Jan. 1978; HUMZ 78390, 1 female, 222.4 mm SL, off Aomori Prefecture (40°47.6’N, 142°16.7’E to 40°41.5’N, 142°19.2’E), 920–948 m depth, 11 Sep. 1978. Other specimens (6 specimens, 203.0– 253.1 mm SL): HUMZ 157660, 157669, 181894–95, 192737, 2 males and 3 females, 203.0– 253.1 mm SL, Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific; HUMZ 177036, 1 female, 241.8 mm SL, eastern Hokkaido Island, northwestern Pacific. Diagnosis. Vertebrae 20 + 71–75 = 91–95; head length 16.3–19.9% SL; interorbital pore 1; occipital pores absent; postorbital pores 4; suborbital pores 5 + 1 (rarely 5 + 2); preoperculomandibular pores 8; vomerine teeth 7–17; palatine teeth 5–25, arranged in 1 or 1–2 rows; opercular flap well-developed; pelvic-fin base positioned below lower edge of gill opening; lateral line incomplete and positioned ventrally; scales present on pectoral fin and its base; body uniformly dark brown when fresh. Description. Counts and proportional measurements in Table 10. Body elongate, cross section oval anteriorly, compressed laterally near tail; its width at anal-fin origin 5.4–6.5 (5.7)% SL. Head moderately long, ovoid; dorsal profile of head gently sloping to dorsal-fin origin. Snout short, 125.8–173.2 (159.3)% of eye diameter. Eye ovoid, relatively large. Interorbital space narrow, width 15.6–35.6 (27.4)% of eye diameter. Nostril tube short, not reaching upper lip when depressed. Mouth subterminal; lower jaw extending slightly beyond upper jaw (holotype) (Fig. 39A), or upper jaw extending slightly (paratypes and non-type specimens, all females) or significantly (non-type males) beyond lower jaw (Fig. 39B, C). Posterior end of upper jaw reaching to or slightly beyond vertical through suborbital pore behind eye in males, reaching below posterior margin of eye in females. Labial lobe of lower jaw weak. Teeth on jaws, vomer and palatine small and conical; upper jaw with 2–3 rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly; lower jaw with 2–4 irregular rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly; vomerine teeth irregularly arranged; all palatine teeth in single row, or in 2 rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly (single row). Lower edge of gill opening slightly above lower end of pectoral-fin base. Opercular flap well developed. Gill rakers short and thin (Fig. 40). Pseudobranch filaments short. Lateral line deciduous, positioned ventrally and incomplete; its origin posterior to last postorbital pore and terminating above middle of anal fin. Scales small and cycloid, present on nape, body, pectoral axilla, about basal half of pectoral fin, pectoral-fin base, tail and vertical fins except at margin. Head without scales. ....Continued next page Dorsal-fin origin near vertical through posterior edge of opercular flap; 1st dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 2nd and 3rd vertebrae. Anal-fin origin below 18th to 20th (19th) dorsal-fin ray; 1st anal-fin pterygiophore posterior to parapophysis of ultimate abdominal vertebra or hemal spine of 1st caudal vertebra (posterior to parapophysis of ultimate abdominal vertebra). Last dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 2nd to 5th (between 4th and 5th) preural vertebrae. Last anal-fin pterygiophore between hemal spines of 2nd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) preural vertebrae. Caudal fin with 1–2 (2) epural, 4 upper hypural and 3–4 (4) lower hypural rays. Pectoral fin relatively long, reaching to about mid-portion of abdomen; its posterior margin rounded. Upper end of pectoral-fin base on about lateral midline of body. Pelvic fin short; its posterior margin slightly beyond lower edge of gill opening. Head pores well developed and distinct. Nasal pores 2; anterior pore in front of nostril tube, posterior pore above and slightly anterior to vertical through 1st suborbital pore (Fig. 42A, B). Postorbital pores 4; distance between 1st and 2nd pores longest of those between adjacent pores; 3rd pore slightly higher than others (Fig. 42A, B). Suborbital pores usually 6 (including holotype), rarely 7; 5 pores below eye and last pore behind midline of eye, except for another pore just above 5th pore on left side in HUMZ 181895 and right side in HUMZ 157669; 5th pore behind vertical through 1st postorbital pore (Fig. 42A). Preoperculomandibular pores 8; 4 on lower jaw and 4 on preopercle; last preoperculomandibular pore posterior to lower margin of eye (Fig. 42A, C). One interorbital pore on dorsal midline above middle of eyes (Fig. 42B). Occipital pores absent (Fig. 42B). Color in alcohol. Holotype (Fig. 41) with light purplish brown head, body and vertical fins, color fading somewhat on body, right side of tail and vertical fins. Pectoral fin slightly lighter than body color. Head, body, vertical and pectoral fins dark brown in paratypes. Head and pectoral fin dark brown, body and vertical fins grayish brown, margins of dorsal and anal fins blackish in other specimens. Color when fresh (based on color photograph of HUMZ 192737; Fig. 38). Head and pectoral fin blackish. Body, vertical fins and pectoral-fin base uniformly dark brown. Margins of dorsal and anal fins black. Distribution. The Okhotsk Sea, off northwestern Pacific coast of eastern Hokkaido Island and in the northwestern Pacific from Aomori to Ibaraki prefectures, at depths of 310–1340 m (Toyoshima, 1983, 1984, 1985; Hatooka, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson, 1994; Amaoka et al. , 1995, 2011; Shinohara et al. , 1996; Imamura, 1997, 1998; Koyanagi, 1997; Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998; Anderson & Fedorov, 2004; Shiogaki et al. , 2004; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; Kitagawa et al. , 2008; Shinohara et al. , 2009; Balushkin et al. , 2011; this study). Size. The largest specimen examined during this study measured 253.1 mm SL (261.3 mm TL), about equal to the previously recorded maximum length (252 mm SL, 260 mm TL) (Toyoshima, 1983, 1984, 1985; Hatooka, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson, 1994; Amaoka et al. , 1995, 2011; Koyanagi, 1997; Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007). Remarks. Lycenchelys squamosa resembles L. aurantiaca in having less than 100 total vertebrae, 1 interorbital pore, no occipital pores, 4 postorbital pores and no distinct spots or blotches on the body (vs. lacking this combination of characters in other species of Lycenchelys ) (e.g., Toyoshima, 1983, 1985; Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998; Hatooka, 2000, 2002, 2013; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; this study). See Remarks under L. aurantiaca for a detailed comparison of L. squamosa with L. aurantiaca . In Lycenchelys squamosa , the upper jaw extends forward slightly beyond the lower jaw in females (including paratypes) (Fig. 39B). In males however, the lower jaw extends slightly (holotype, 246.1 mm SL) (Fig. 39A) or considerably beyond the lower jaw (2 non-types, 217.0 and 253.1 mm SL) (Fig. 39C). According to Toyoshima (1983, 1985), the lower jaw of the holotype (male) protrudes slightly beyond the upper jaw, and the lower jaw is nearly equal to or slightly included in the upper jaw of paratypes (females). He did not mention the variation in the jaw protrusion of males because he was able to examine only 1 male specimen (= holotype). Subsequent studies have not described the variation in males of the species even though the extension of the lower jaw in males of the species as presented by Toyoshima (1985) has been repeated in some studies (e.g., Amaoka et al. , 1995, 2011). This study found that the variation in males lies in the length of the upper jaw, not of the lower jaw, although the ratio of the lower jaw length seems to increase with growth (Fig. 43B). In the 3 males examined, the 246.1 mm SL specimen (holotype) with the lower jaw protrusion has a shorter upper jaw, while the largest (253.1 mm SL) and smallest (217.0 mm SL) specimens with the upper jaw protrusion have a longer upper jaw (Fig. 43A). Therefore, the length of the upper jaw may be due to intraspecific variation not associated with change in growth in males of L. squamosa . Further specimens are required to resolve the differences. : 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 45-50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3743698 : {"references": ["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. (1984) Family Zoarcidae. Eelpouts. In: Masuda, H., Amaoka, K., Araga, C., Uyeno, T. & Yoshino, T. (Eds.), The Fishes of the Japanese Archipelago. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 291 - 295. [in Japanese]", "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]", "Amaoka, K., Nakaya, K. & Yabe, M. (1995) The fishes of northern Japan. Kita-Nihon Kaiyo Center, Sapporo, 391 pp. [in Japanese]", "Koyanagi, M. (1997) Zoarcidae. In: Okamura, O. & Amaoka, K. (Eds.), Sea fishes of Japan, Yama-Kei, Tokyo, pp. 536 - 538. [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]", "Zama, A. (2001) Fish fauna of Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. Sanwa Publisher, Ishinomaki, 153 pp. [in Japanese]", "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]", "Shinohara, G. & Matsuura, K. (1998) A new zoarcid, Lycenchelys aurantiaca, from the Pacific coast off northern Japan (Teleostei: Perciformes). Ichthyological Research, 45, 151 - 155. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / BF 02678557", "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.", "Shiogaki, M., Ishito, Y., Nomura, Y. & Sugimoto, T. (2004) Revised catalog of the fishes collected from the waters of Aomori Prefecture. Bulletin of Aomori Prefectural Fisheries Research Center, (4), 39 - 80. [in Japanese with English abstract]", "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. (1985) Taxonomy of the subfamily Lycodinae (family Zoarcidae) in Japan and adjacent waters. Memoirs of the Faculty of Fisheries, Hokkaido University, 32, 131 - 243."]} |
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 squamosa Toyoshima 1983 |
title_short |
Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983 |
title_full |
Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983 |
title_fullStr |
Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983 |
title_sort |
lycenchelys squamosa toyoshima 1983 |
publisher |
Zenodo |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809763 https://zenodo.org/record/3809763 |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-66.213,-66.213,-66.445,-66.445) ENVELOPE(154.213,154.213,59.612,59.612) |
geographic |
Okhotsk Pacific Fukushima Nakaya Yama |
geographic_facet |
Okhotsk Pacific Fukushima Nakaya Yama |
genre |
okhotsk sea |
genre_facet |
okhotsk sea |
op_relation |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809763 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743776 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743778 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743780 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743782 https: |
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ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3809763 2023-05-15T17:52:43+02:00 Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima 1983 Kawarada, Shumpei Imamura, Hisashi Narimatsu, Yoji Shinohara, Gento 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809763 https://zenodo.org/record/3809763 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.3743776 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743778 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743780 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743782 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743784 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743786 http://zoobank.org/BEBD8F0D-1347-4A44-86D4-2915433D2E7B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809762 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.3809763 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743776 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743778 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743780 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3743782 https: 2022-02-09T14:14:30Z Lycenchelys squamosa Toyoshima, 1983 (Japanese name: Uroko-hebigenge) (Figs. 38–43; Table 10) Lycenchelys squamosus Toyoshima, 1983: 145, figs. 20–22, table 10, pl. 93 (original description, type locality: off Miyagi Prefecture, Pacific coast of Honshu Island, Japan); Toyoshima, 1984: 293, pl. 274-E (brief description); Toyoshma, 1985: 156, figs. 6–7, 12–13, 31, table 1 (description); Hatooka, 1993: 901, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Amaoka et al. , 1995: 241, pl. 405 (brief description); Koyanagi, 1997: 538, fig. 5 (brief description); Imamura, 1998: 32, fig. 13 (brief description); Zama, 2001: 86, 133 (species list). Lycenchelys squamosa : Anderson, 1994: 113, 118 (species list); Shinohara et al. , 1996: 182 (species list); Imamura, 1997: 60 (species list); Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998: table 1 (comparison with Lycenchelys aurantiaca ); Hatooka, 2000: 1033, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Hatooka, 2002: 1033, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Anderson & Fedorov, 2004: 20 (species list); Shiogaki et al. , 2004: 71 (species list); Shinohara & Anderson, 2007: 64 (key to species); Kitagawa et al. , 2008: 96, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Shinohara et al. , 2009: 724 (species list); Amaoka et al. , 2011: 318, unnumbered fig. (brief description); Balushkin et al. , 2011: 983 (catalog of specimens); Hatooka, 2013: 1227, unnumbered fig. (key to species); Nakabo & Hirashima, 2015: 217 (species list and etymology of scientific name). Materials examined Holotype : HUMZ 78464, male, 246.1 mm SL, off Miyagi Prefecture, Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific (37°49.7’N, 142°23.7’E to 37°55.4’N, 142°24.5’E), 985–1005 m depth, 8 Oct. 1978. Paratypes (2 specimens, 193.0– 222.5 mm SL, both from Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific): HUMZ 72563, 1 female, 193.0 mm SL, off Fukushima Prefecture (37°09.4’N, 141°56E), 900–920 m depth, 19 Jan. 1978; HUMZ 78390, 1 female, 222.4 mm SL, off Aomori Prefecture (40°47.6’N, 142°16.7’E to 40°41.5’N, 142°19.2’E), 920–948 m depth, 11 Sep. 1978. Other specimens (6 specimens, 203.0– 253.1 mm SL): HUMZ 157660, 157669, 181894–95, 192737, 2 males and 3 females, 203.0– 253.1 mm SL, Tohoku District, northwestern Pacific; HUMZ 177036, 1 female, 241.8 mm SL, eastern Hokkaido Island, northwestern Pacific. Diagnosis. Vertebrae 20 + 71–75 = 91–95; head length 16.3–19.9% SL; interorbital pore 1; occipital pores absent; postorbital pores 4; suborbital pores 5 + 1 (rarely 5 + 2); preoperculomandibular pores 8; vomerine teeth 7–17; palatine teeth 5–25, arranged in 1 or 1–2 rows; opercular flap well-developed; pelvic-fin base positioned below lower edge of gill opening; lateral line incomplete and positioned ventrally; scales present on pectoral fin and its base; body uniformly dark brown when fresh. Description. Counts and proportional measurements in Table 10. Body elongate, cross section oval anteriorly, compressed laterally near tail; its width at anal-fin origin 5.4–6.5 (5.7)% SL. Head moderately long, ovoid; dorsal profile of head gently sloping to dorsal-fin origin. Snout short, 125.8–173.2 (159.3)% of eye diameter. Eye ovoid, relatively large. Interorbital space narrow, width 15.6–35.6 (27.4)% of eye diameter. Nostril tube short, not reaching upper lip when depressed. Mouth subterminal; lower jaw extending slightly beyond upper jaw (holotype) (Fig. 39A), or upper jaw extending slightly (paratypes and non-type specimens, all females) or significantly (non-type males) beyond lower jaw (Fig. 39B, C). Posterior end of upper jaw reaching to or slightly beyond vertical through suborbital pore behind eye in males, reaching below posterior margin of eye in females. Labial lobe of lower jaw weak. Teeth on jaws, vomer and palatine small and conical; upper jaw with 2–3 rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly; lower jaw with 2–4 irregular rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly; vomerine teeth irregularly arranged; all palatine teeth in single row, or in 2 rows anteriorly and single row posteriorly (single row). Lower edge of gill opening slightly above lower end of pectoral-fin base. Opercular flap well developed. Gill rakers short and thin (Fig. 40). Pseudobranch filaments short. Lateral line deciduous, positioned ventrally and incomplete; its origin posterior to last postorbital pore and terminating above middle of anal fin. Scales small and cycloid, present on nape, body, pectoral axilla, about basal half of pectoral fin, pectoral-fin base, tail and vertical fins except at margin. Head without scales. ....Continued next page Dorsal-fin origin near vertical through posterior edge of opercular flap; 1st dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 2nd and 3rd vertebrae. Anal-fin origin below 18th to 20th (19th) dorsal-fin ray; 1st anal-fin pterygiophore posterior to parapophysis of ultimate abdominal vertebra or hemal spine of 1st caudal vertebra (posterior to parapophysis of ultimate abdominal vertebra). Last dorsal-fin pterygiophore between neural spines of 2nd to 5th (between 4th and 5th) preural vertebrae. Last anal-fin pterygiophore between hemal spines of 2nd to 5th (between 3rd and 4th) preural vertebrae. Caudal fin with 1–2 (2) epural, 4 upper hypural and 3–4 (4) lower hypural rays. Pectoral fin relatively long, reaching to about mid-portion of abdomen; its posterior margin rounded. Upper end of pectoral-fin base on about lateral midline of body. Pelvic fin short; its posterior margin slightly beyond lower edge of gill opening. Head pores well developed and distinct. Nasal pores 2; anterior pore in front of nostril tube, posterior pore above and slightly anterior to vertical through 1st suborbital pore (Fig. 42A, B). Postorbital pores 4; distance between 1st and 2nd pores longest of those between adjacent pores; 3rd pore slightly higher than others (Fig. 42A, B). Suborbital pores usually 6 (including holotype), rarely 7; 5 pores below eye and last pore behind midline of eye, except for another pore just above 5th pore on left side in HUMZ 181895 and right side in HUMZ 157669; 5th pore behind vertical through 1st postorbital pore (Fig. 42A). Preoperculomandibular pores 8; 4 on lower jaw and 4 on preopercle; last preoperculomandibular pore posterior to lower margin of eye (Fig. 42A, C). One interorbital pore on dorsal midline above middle of eyes (Fig. 42B). Occipital pores absent (Fig. 42B). Color in alcohol. Holotype (Fig. 41) with light purplish brown head, body and vertical fins, color fading somewhat on body, right side of tail and vertical fins. Pectoral fin slightly lighter than body color. Head, body, vertical and pectoral fins dark brown in paratypes. Head and pectoral fin dark brown, body and vertical fins grayish brown, margins of dorsal and anal fins blackish in other specimens. Color when fresh (based on color photograph of HUMZ 192737; Fig. 38). Head and pectoral fin blackish. Body, vertical fins and pectoral-fin base uniformly dark brown. Margins of dorsal and anal fins black. Distribution. The Okhotsk Sea, off northwestern Pacific coast of eastern Hokkaido Island and in the northwestern Pacific from Aomori to Ibaraki prefectures, at depths of 310–1340 m (Toyoshima, 1983, 1984, 1985; Hatooka, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson, 1994; Amaoka et al. , 1995, 2011; Shinohara et al. , 1996; Imamura, 1997, 1998; Koyanagi, 1997; Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998; Anderson & Fedorov, 2004; Shiogaki et al. , 2004; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; Kitagawa et al. , 2008; Shinohara et al. , 2009; Balushkin et al. , 2011; this study). Size. The largest specimen examined during this study measured 253.1 mm SL (261.3 mm TL), about equal to the previously recorded maximum length (252 mm SL, 260 mm TL) (Toyoshima, 1983, 1984, 1985; Hatooka, 1993, 2000, 2002, 2013; Anderson, 1994; Amaoka et al. , 1995, 2011; Koyanagi, 1997; Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007). Remarks. Lycenchelys squamosa resembles L. aurantiaca in having less than 100 total vertebrae, 1 interorbital pore, no occipital pores, 4 postorbital pores and no distinct spots or blotches on the body (vs. lacking this combination of characters in other species of Lycenchelys ) (e.g., Toyoshima, 1983, 1985; Shinohara & Matsuura, 1998; Hatooka, 2000, 2002, 2013; Shinohara & Anderson, 2007; this study). See Remarks under L. aurantiaca for a detailed comparison of L. squamosa with L. aurantiaca . In Lycenchelys squamosa , the upper jaw extends forward slightly beyond the lower jaw in females (including paratypes) (Fig. 39B). In males however, the lower jaw extends slightly (holotype, 246.1 mm SL) (Fig. 39A) or considerably beyond the lower jaw (2 non-types, 217.0 and 253.1 mm SL) (Fig. 39C). According to Toyoshima (1983, 1985), the lower jaw of the holotype (male) protrudes slightly beyond the upper jaw, and the lower jaw is nearly equal to or slightly included in the upper jaw of paratypes (females). He did not mention the variation in the jaw protrusion of males because he was able to examine only 1 male specimen (= holotype). Subsequent studies have not described the variation in males of the species even though the extension of the lower jaw in males of the species as presented by Toyoshima (1985) has been repeated in some studies (e.g., Amaoka et al. , 1995, 2011). This study found that the variation in males lies in the length of the upper jaw, not of the lower jaw, although the ratio of the lower jaw length seems to increase with growth (Fig. 43B). In the 3 males examined, the 246.1 mm SL specimen (holotype) with the lower jaw protrusion has a shorter upper jaw, while the largest (253.1 mm SL) and smallest (217.0 mm SL) specimens with the upper jaw protrusion have a longer upper jaw (Fig. 43A). Therefore, the length of the upper jaw may be due to intraspecific variation not associated with change in growth in males of L. squamosa . Further specimens are required to resolve the differences. : 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 45-50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4762.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3743698 : {"references": ["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. 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