Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.

Abyssobrotula hadropercularis sp. nov. (Figs. 1–6, Table 1) Holotype. NSMT-P 121429, 200 mm SL, female, Kuril-Kamchatka Trench (46 ° 55.53 ′N, 160 ° 2.84 ′E – 46 ° 54.14 ′N, 160 ° 1.99 ′E), R/V Hakuho-maru, st. NBD- 2, beam trawl, 5204–5205 m, 31 May 2014. Paratype. NSMT-P 121428, 149 mm SL, male, K...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ohashi, Shinpei, Nielsen, Jørgen G.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6063884
https://zenodo.org/record/6063884
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6063884
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Ophidiiformes
Ophidiidae
Abyssobrotula
Abyssobrotula hadropercularis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Ophidiiformes
Ophidiidae
Abyssobrotula
Abyssobrotula hadropercularis
Ohashi, Shinpei
Nielsen, Jørgen G.
Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Ophidiiformes
Ophidiidae
Abyssobrotula
Abyssobrotula hadropercularis
description Abyssobrotula hadropercularis sp. nov. (Figs. 1–6, Table 1) Holotype. NSMT-P 121429, 200 mm SL, female, Kuril-Kamchatka Trench (46 ° 55.53 ′N, 160 ° 2.84 ′E – 46 ° 54.14 ′N, 160 ° 1.99 ′E), R/V Hakuho-maru, st. NBD- 2, beam trawl, 5204–5205 m, 31 May 2014. Paratype. NSMT-P 121428, 149 mm SL, male, Kuril-Kamchatka Trench (47 ° 0.22 ′N, 160 ° 2.62 ′E – 47 ° 0.91 ′N, 160 ° 1.29 ′E), R/V Hakuho-maru, st. NBD- 1, beam trawl, 5179–5223 m, 27 May 2014. Diagnosis and similarity. Abyssobrotula hadropercularis differs from A. galatheae , the only other species of the genus, by the following characters ( A. galatheae mentioned in parenthesis): Opercular spine pointed and strong (vs. flat and weak), pectoral fin rays 14–15 (vs. 10–11), head length 22.0– 22.5 % SL (vs. 17.5–19.5), diameter of pigmented eye 1.2–1.3 % SL (vs. 0.7–0.9), preanal length 42.5 % SL (vs. 33.0– 41.5), prepelvic length 14.0– 14.5 % SL (vs. 10.5–12.5), rakers on anterior gill arch robust and close-set (vs. thin and well separated). Description. Selected meristic and morphometric characters are shown in Table 1. The description is based on the holotype, differences observed in the paratype mentioned in parenthesis. Body compressed with tapering tail, depth at anus about 7 times in SL. Head inflected downward, its length slightly less than half preanal-fin length. Cycloid scales in some parts of head and body (Fig. 2), but empty scale pockets indicate that most areas of body and head covered with scales. Judging from the loose skin, snout and dorsal part of head seem to have been swollen. Two pairs of nostrils with wide opening between tip of snout and eye: Anterior nostril circular at tip of snout and posterior nostril between anterior nostril and eye, slightly exposing lateral ethmoid. Eye small, 3.8 (4.6) times in snout length. Mouth inferior, upper jaw long, posterior margin extending well behind eye. Supramaxilla elliptical. Opercle robust, but its dorsal margin extremely thin making rudimentary bulge above spine; its spine pointed and strong not reaching posterior end of subopercle. Preopercle thin and soft, its hind margin without spines. Gill opening wide. Anterior left gill arch (right gill arch is missing in holotype) with 5 (4–5) short rakers on upper branch, one long raker at the angle between branches, and lower branch with 7 (8–9) long rakers followed by 7 (7–8) short rakers. Long rakers robust and close-set (Fig. 3). Longest gill raker on anterior arch about three times length of longest gill filament. Pseudobranch consisting of two short filaments. Branchiostegal rays 7 in left and 8 in right (8 in both sides). Lateral line indistinct. Base of dorsal and anal fins long, continuous with caudal fin; their rays unbranched. Origin of dorsal fin above base of pectoral fin. Origin of anal fin well anterior to midpoint of body. Pectoral fin slender extending beyond anus. Pelvic-fin rays thread-like, originating below preopercle. Caudal fin missing most parts of rays (with slender rays). Anus just anterior to anal-fin origin. A. hadropercularis sp. nov. A. galatheae * NSMT-P 121429 NSMT-P 121428 Holotype Paratype Min (mean) max No SL (mm) 200 149 67–157 16 Meristic characters Dorsal-fin rays 116 112 97 (105.1) 116 15 Caudal-fin rays 8 8 8 16 Anal-fin rays 90 87 76 (83.0) 96 15 Pectoral-fin rays 14 (left), 15 (right) 14 (left), 15 (right) 10 (10.1) 11 16 Pelvic-fin rays 2 2 2 16 Precaudal vertebrae 19 20 17 (18.3) 19 16 Caudal vertebrae 48 48 49 (51.5) 56 16 Dorsal-fin origin above vertebra number 8 9 6 (7.1) 8 15 Dorsal-fin origin above anal-fin ray number 28 27 23 (25.8) 30 15 Anal-fin origin below vertebra number 23 24 21 (21.5) 23 15 Long gill rakers 8 9 8 (9.9) 11 16 Total gill rakers 20 21 15 (18.6) 22 16 Morphometric characters in % SL Head 22.5 22.0 17.5 (18.4) 19.5 13 Depth at origin of anal fin 14.0 13.5 11.0 (13.7) 15.0 11 Upper jaw 11.5 11.5 9.5 (10.5) 12.0 13 Diameter of pigmented eye 1.2 1.3 0.7 (0.8) 0.9 6 Postorbital 14.5 14.5 11.5 (12.4) 13.0 10 Prepelvic 14.5 14.0 10.5 (11.8) 12.5 13 Preanal 42.5 42.5 33.0 (38.3) 41.5 14 Predorsal 25.0 25.5 20.5 (21.9) 25.5 14 Pelvic fin to anal fin origin 28.5 29.5 25.0 (27.3) 29.0 12 Pectoral fin** 24.0 23.0 21.0–51.0 13 Pelvic fin** 12.5 13.0 4.6 –12.0 10 Long gill raker 3.3 3.4 2.6 (3.3) 3.8 8 Longest gill filament 1.1 1.2 0.4 (0.6) 0.8 6 * 14 specimens from Nielsen (1977) and 2 specimens newly examined (NSMT-P 18975 and 98870) **fin rays often broken Head pores (Fig. 4). Infraorbital pores 6, preoperculomandibular pores 7 (left) or 8 (right) (8). Anterior five preoperculomandibular pores of on ventral surface of lower jaw. Dentition. Premaxilla and dentary with 2–7 irregular rows of small, pointed teeth. Palatines with several irregular rows of small, pointed teeth. Vomer boomerang-shaped with 2–5 (2–3) irregular rows of small, pointed teeth (inner row regular). Two median and one sideways on basibranchials in holotype, most probably caused by the partly destroyed mouth-floor (fig. 5 showing undisturbed basibranchial tooth patches of paratype). Axial skeleton (based on radiographs). First neural spine about half length of second. Neural spines 2–7 gradually decreasing in length and the posterior seven precaudal spines increasing in length. Bases of neural spines 4–19 (20) enlarged. Parapophyses developed on vertebrae 7–19 (20). Pleural ribs on vertebrae 3–17 (18). Epipleural ribs could not observed. Otolith (Fig. 6). Otolith small (0.8 mm long) nearly round in outline except for slightly elevated mid-dorsal region. Inner face almost flat, smooth, with barely visible, shallow, centrally placed sulcus. Outer face strongly convex, smooth. Otolith length to height = 1.2, length to thickness = 1.8, and length to sulcus = 3.3. Colour (nine months after captured). Oral cavity and dorsal area and sides of head bluish and lower part dark brown. Eyes bluish with light lens. Branchial cavity and peritoneum dark brown. Abdomen dark bluish. Sides of body light brown. Fin rays with dark brown pigmentation. Distribution. Known from two abyssal (5179–5223 meters) locations in the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, Western North Pacific Ocean. Etymology. The specific name, hadropercularis , derives from hadros (bulky) and opercularis (gill cover) in reference to the robust opercle. Comparative material. Abyssobrotula galatheae , 16 specimens: ZMUC P 77599, holotype, 130 mm SL, female, Kermadec Trench (36 °07′S, 178 ° 32 ′W), 5230–5340 m, R/V Galathea , 23 Feb. 1952; ZMUC P 77600, paratype, 123 mm SL, female, Kermadec Trench (32 ° 10 ′S, 175 ° 54 ′W), 5850–5900 m, R/V Galathea , 18 Feb. 1952; ZMUC P 77601 –77602, paratypes, 100–110 mm SL, female, Kermadec Trench (36 ° 34 ′S, 178 ° 57 ′W), 4540 m, R/V Galathea , 24 Feb. 1952; CAS 36574, 133 mm SL, female, Eastern Pacific (1 ° 19 ′N, 84 °07′W – 1 ° 12 ′N, 83 ° 56 ′W), 2926–3292 m, R/V Te Vega , 6 Oct. 1968; MNHN 1976 - 43 and 1976 -44, 67 and 132 mm SL, sex unknown and female, Eastern South Atlantic (18 ° 52.1 ′S, 7 ° 23.1 ′E), 5048 m, R/V Jean Charcot , 6 June 1971; MNHN 1976-45, 156 mm SL, female, Eastern Atlantic (0° 23.2 ′N, 3 ° 42.4 ′W), 4975 m, R/V Jean Charcot , 28 May 1971; NSMT-P 18975, 111 mm SL, female, Izu-Bonin Trench (30 ° 41.3 ′N, 141 ° 49.7 ′E), 4610 m, R/V Soyo-maru , 23 Nov. 1974; NSMT-P 98870, Western North Pacific (31 ° 43.4 ′N, 158 °05.3′E – 31 °39.0′N, 158 °07.1′E), 2171– 2491 m, R/V Kaiyo-maru , 31 May 1984; UMML 29070, 140 mm SL, female, Puerto Rico Trench (19 ° 43 ′N, 67 °05′W), 8370 m, R/V Pillsbury , 21 Jan. 1970; USNM 226588, 142 mm SL, Western Atlantic (28 ° 43 ′N, 78 ° 49 ′W), 5105 m, R/V Columbus Iselin, 12 Feb. 1978; ZIL 43250, 125 mm SL, sex unknown, Eastern Indian Ocean (15 ° 41 ′S, 104 ° 57 ′E), 5750–5940 m, R/V Vitiaz , 26 Nov. 1959; ZMUC P77676, 75 mm SL, sex unknown, Western North Atlantic (38 ° 39.5 ′N, 69 ° 58.1 ′W – 38 ° 37.8 ′N, 70 °01′W), 3111–3115 m, R/V Chain , 11 July 1975; ZMUC P 77685 –77687, 142– 157 mm SL, females, Eastern Pacific (9 ° 23 ′N, 89 ° 32 ′W), 3570 m, R/V Galathea , 6 May 1952. : Published as part of Ohashi, Shinpei & Nielsen, Jørgen G., 2016, A new species of Abyssobrotula (Ophidiiformes, Ophidiidae) from the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, pp. 559-566 in Zootaxa 4132 (4) on pages 560-564, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4132.4.7, http://zenodo.org/record/257639 : {"references": ["Nielsen, J. G. (1977) The deepest living fish Abyssobrotula galatheae a new genus and species of oviparous ophidioids (Pisces, Brotulidae). Galathea Report, 14, 41 - 48."]}
format Text
author Ohashi, Shinpei
Nielsen, Jørgen G.
author_facet Ohashi, Shinpei
Nielsen, Jørgen G.
author_sort Ohashi, Shinpei
title Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
title_short Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
title_full Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
title_sort abyssobrotula hadropercularis ohashi & nielsen, 2016, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6063884
https://zenodo.org/record/6063884
long_lat ENVELOPE(139.017,139.017,-69.367,-69.367)
geographic Pacific
Indian
Charcot
geographic_facet Pacific
Indian
Charcot
genre Kamchatka
North Atlantic
genre_facet Kamchatka
North Atlantic
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6063884 2023-05-15T16:59:28+02:00 Abyssobrotula hadropercularis Ohashi & Nielsen, 2016, sp. nov. Ohashi, Shinpei Nielsen, Jørgen G. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6063884 https://zenodo.org/record/6063884 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/257639 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7417FFA9FF95950EFFDF8962F60A1A5C http://zoobank.org/49780E38-6FFE-492A-A3C8-65B3466A56E5 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4132.4.7 http://zenodo.org/record/257639 http://publication.plazi.org/id/7417FFA9FF95950EFFDF8962F60A1A5C https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257640 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257641 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257642 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257643 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257644 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257645 http://zoobank.org/49780E38-6FFE-492A-A3C8-65B3466A56E5 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6063883 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Chordata Actinopterygii Ophidiiformes Ophidiidae Abyssobrotula Abyssobrotula hadropercularis article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6063884 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4132.4.7 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257640 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257641 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257642 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.257643 https://do 2022-04-01T10:12:55Z Abyssobrotula hadropercularis sp. nov. (Figs. 1–6, Table 1) Holotype. NSMT-P 121429, 200 mm SL, female, Kuril-Kamchatka Trench (46 ° 55.53 ′N, 160 ° 2.84 ′E – 46 ° 54.14 ′N, 160 ° 1.99 ′E), R/V Hakuho-maru, st. NBD- 2, beam trawl, 5204–5205 m, 31 May 2014. Paratype. NSMT-P 121428, 149 mm SL, male, Kuril-Kamchatka Trench (47 ° 0.22 ′N, 160 ° 2.62 ′E – 47 ° 0.91 ′N, 160 ° 1.29 ′E), R/V Hakuho-maru, st. NBD- 1, beam trawl, 5179–5223 m, 27 May 2014. Diagnosis and similarity. Abyssobrotula hadropercularis differs from A. galatheae , the only other species of the genus, by the following characters ( A. galatheae mentioned in parenthesis): Opercular spine pointed and strong (vs. flat and weak), pectoral fin rays 14–15 (vs. 10–11), head length 22.0– 22.5 % SL (vs. 17.5–19.5), diameter of pigmented eye 1.2–1.3 % SL (vs. 0.7–0.9), preanal length 42.5 % SL (vs. 33.0– 41.5), prepelvic length 14.0– 14.5 % SL (vs. 10.5–12.5), rakers on anterior gill arch robust and close-set (vs. thin and well separated). Description. Selected meristic and morphometric characters are shown in Table 1. The description is based on the holotype, differences observed in the paratype mentioned in parenthesis. Body compressed with tapering tail, depth at anus about 7 times in SL. Head inflected downward, its length slightly less than half preanal-fin length. Cycloid scales in some parts of head and body (Fig. 2), but empty scale pockets indicate that most areas of body and head covered with scales. Judging from the loose skin, snout and dorsal part of head seem to have been swollen. Two pairs of nostrils with wide opening between tip of snout and eye: Anterior nostril circular at tip of snout and posterior nostril between anterior nostril and eye, slightly exposing lateral ethmoid. Eye small, 3.8 (4.6) times in snout length. Mouth inferior, upper jaw long, posterior margin extending well behind eye. Supramaxilla elliptical. Opercle robust, but its dorsal margin extremely thin making rudimentary bulge above spine; its spine pointed and strong not reaching posterior end of subopercle. Preopercle thin and soft, its hind margin without spines. Gill opening wide. Anterior left gill arch (right gill arch is missing in holotype) with 5 (4–5) short rakers on upper branch, one long raker at the angle between branches, and lower branch with 7 (8–9) long rakers followed by 7 (7–8) short rakers. Long rakers robust and close-set (Fig. 3). Longest gill raker on anterior arch about three times length of longest gill filament. Pseudobranch consisting of two short filaments. Branchiostegal rays 7 in left and 8 in right (8 in both sides). Lateral line indistinct. Base of dorsal and anal fins long, continuous with caudal fin; their rays unbranched. Origin of dorsal fin above base of pectoral fin. Origin of anal fin well anterior to midpoint of body. Pectoral fin slender extending beyond anus. Pelvic-fin rays thread-like, originating below preopercle. Caudal fin missing most parts of rays (with slender rays). Anus just anterior to anal-fin origin. A. hadropercularis sp. nov. A. galatheae * NSMT-P 121429 NSMT-P 121428 Holotype Paratype Min (mean) max No SL (mm) 200 149 67–157 16 Meristic characters Dorsal-fin rays 116 112 97 (105.1) 116 15 Caudal-fin rays 8 8 8 16 Anal-fin rays 90 87 76 (83.0) 96 15 Pectoral-fin rays 14 (left), 15 (right) 14 (left), 15 (right) 10 (10.1) 11 16 Pelvic-fin rays 2 2 2 16 Precaudal vertebrae 19 20 17 (18.3) 19 16 Caudal vertebrae 48 48 49 (51.5) 56 16 Dorsal-fin origin above vertebra number 8 9 6 (7.1) 8 15 Dorsal-fin origin above anal-fin ray number 28 27 23 (25.8) 30 15 Anal-fin origin below vertebra number 23 24 21 (21.5) 23 15 Long gill rakers 8 9 8 (9.9) 11 16 Total gill rakers 20 21 15 (18.6) 22 16 Morphometric characters in % SL Head 22.5 22.0 17.5 (18.4) 19.5 13 Depth at origin of anal fin 14.0 13.5 11.0 (13.7) 15.0 11 Upper jaw 11.5 11.5 9.5 (10.5) 12.0 13 Diameter of pigmented eye 1.2 1.3 0.7 (0.8) 0.9 6 Postorbital 14.5 14.5 11.5 (12.4) 13.0 10 Prepelvic 14.5 14.0 10.5 (11.8) 12.5 13 Preanal 42.5 42.5 33.0 (38.3) 41.5 14 Predorsal 25.0 25.5 20.5 (21.9) 25.5 14 Pelvic fin to anal fin origin 28.5 29.5 25.0 (27.3) 29.0 12 Pectoral fin** 24.0 23.0 21.0–51.0 13 Pelvic fin** 12.5 13.0 4.6 –12.0 10 Long gill raker 3.3 3.4 2.6 (3.3) 3.8 8 Longest gill filament 1.1 1.2 0.4 (0.6) 0.8 6 * 14 specimens from Nielsen (1977) and 2 specimens newly examined (NSMT-P 18975 and 98870) **fin rays often broken Head pores (Fig. 4). Infraorbital pores 6, preoperculomandibular pores 7 (left) or 8 (right) (8). Anterior five preoperculomandibular pores of on ventral surface of lower jaw. Dentition. Premaxilla and dentary with 2–7 irregular rows of small, pointed teeth. Palatines with several irregular rows of small, pointed teeth. Vomer boomerang-shaped with 2–5 (2–3) irregular rows of small, pointed teeth (inner row regular). Two median and one sideways on basibranchials in holotype, most probably caused by the partly destroyed mouth-floor (fig. 5 showing undisturbed basibranchial tooth patches of paratype). Axial skeleton (based on radiographs). First neural spine about half length of second. Neural spines 2–7 gradually decreasing in length and the posterior seven precaudal spines increasing in length. Bases of neural spines 4–19 (20) enlarged. Parapophyses developed on vertebrae 7–19 (20). Pleural ribs on vertebrae 3–17 (18). Epipleural ribs could not observed. Otolith (Fig. 6). Otolith small (0.8 mm long) nearly round in outline except for slightly elevated mid-dorsal region. Inner face almost flat, smooth, with barely visible, shallow, centrally placed sulcus. Outer face strongly convex, smooth. Otolith length to height = 1.2, length to thickness = 1.8, and length to sulcus = 3.3. Colour (nine months after captured). Oral cavity and dorsal area and sides of head bluish and lower part dark brown. Eyes bluish with light lens. Branchial cavity and peritoneum dark brown. Abdomen dark bluish. Sides of body light brown. Fin rays with dark brown pigmentation. Distribution. Known from two abyssal (5179–5223 meters) locations in the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, Western North Pacific Ocean. Etymology. The specific name, hadropercularis , derives from hadros (bulky) and opercularis (gill cover) in reference to the robust opercle. Comparative material. Abyssobrotula galatheae , 16 specimens: ZMUC P 77599, holotype, 130 mm SL, female, Kermadec Trench (36 °07′S, 178 ° 32 ′W), 5230–5340 m, R/V Galathea , 23 Feb. 1952; ZMUC P 77600, paratype, 123 mm SL, female, Kermadec Trench (32 ° 10 ′S, 175 ° 54 ′W), 5850–5900 m, R/V Galathea , 18 Feb. 1952; ZMUC P 77601 –77602, paratypes, 100–110 mm SL, female, Kermadec Trench (36 ° 34 ′S, 178 ° 57 ′W), 4540 m, R/V Galathea , 24 Feb. 1952; CAS 36574, 133 mm SL, female, Eastern Pacific (1 ° 19 ′N, 84 °07′W – 1 ° 12 ′N, 83 ° 56 ′W), 2926–3292 m, R/V Te Vega , 6 Oct. 1968; MNHN 1976 - 43 and 1976 -44, 67 and 132 mm SL, sex unknown and female, Eastern South Atlantic (18 ° 52.1 ′S, 7 ° 23.1 ′E), 5048 m, R/V Jean Charcot , 6 June 1971; MNHN 1976-45, 156 mm SL, female, Eastern Atlantic (0° 23.2 ′N, 3 ° 42.4 ′W), 4975 m, R/V Jean Charcot , 28 May 1971; NSMT-P 18975, 111 mm SL, female, Izu-Bonin Trench (30 ° 41.3 ′N, 141 ° 49.7 ′E), 4610 m, R/V Soyo-maru , 23 Nov. 1974; NSMT-P 98870, Western North Pacific (31 ° 43.4 ′N, 158 °05.3′E – 31 °39.0′N, 158 °07.1′E), 2171– 2491 m, R/V Kaiyo-maru , 31 May 1984; UMML 29070, 140 mm SL, female, Puerto Rico Trench (19 ° 43 ′N, 67 °05′W), 8370 m, R/V Pillsbury , 21 Jan. 1970; USNM 226588, 142 mm SL, Western Atlantic (28 ° 43 ′N, 78 ° 49 ′W), 5105 m, R/V Columbus Iselin, 12 Feb. 1978; ZIL 43250, 125 mm SL, sex unknown, Eastern Indian Ocean (15 ° 41 ′S, 104 ° 57 ′E), 5750–5940 m, R/V Vitiaz , 26 Nov. 1959; ZMUC P77676, 75 mm SL, sex unknown, Western North Atlantic (38 ° 39.5 ′N, 69 ° 58.1 ′W – 38 ° 37.8 ′N, 70 °01′W), 3111–3115 m, R/V Chain , 11 July 1975; ZMUC P 77685 –77687, 142– 157 mm SL, females, Eastern Pacific (9 ° 23 ′N, 89 ° 32 ′W), 3570 m, R/V Galathea , 6 May 1952. : Published as part of Ohashi, Shinpei & Nielsen, Jørgen G., 2016, A new species of Abyssobrotula (Ophidiiformes, Ophidiidae) from the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, pp. 559-566 in Zootaxa 4132 (4) on pages 560-564, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4132.4.7, http://zenodo.org/record/257639 : {"references": ["Nielsen, J. G. (1977) The deepest living fish Abyssobrotula galatheae a new genus and species of oviparous ophidioids (Pisces, Brotulidae). Galathea Report, 14, 41 - 48."]} Text Kamchatka North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific Indian Charcot ENVELOPE(139.017,139.017,-69.367,-69.367)