Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.

Paraliparis pseudokreffti n. sp. Fig. 23 Holotype. NMNZ P.038023, female, 128 mm SL, 136 mm TL, 46 ° 38.80 ' S, 178 ° 30.03 ' E, Bounty Trough, R/V Tangaroa , Stn. TAN 0 116, 10 October 2001, 2786– 2821 m. NMNZ P.038023/ 1, cleared and stained right pectoral girdle. Comparative material. P...

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Main Author: Stein, David L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2012
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6173267
https://zenodo.org/record/6173267
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6173267
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
Scorpaeniformes
Liparidae
Paraliparis
Paraliparis pseudokreffti
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Scorpaeniformes
Liparidae
Paraliparis
Paraliparis pseudokreffti
Stein, David L.
Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Scorpaeniformes
Liparidae
Paraliparis
Paraliparis pseudokreffti
description Paraliparis pseudokreffti n. sp. Fig. 23 Holotype. NMNZ P.038023, female, 128 mm SL, 136 mm TL, 46 ° 38.80 ' S, 178 ° 30.03 ' E, Bounty Trough, R/V Tangaroa , Stn. TAN 0 116, 10 October 2001, 2786– 2821 m. NMNZ P.038023/ 1, cleared and stained right pectoral girdle. Comparative material. P. kreffti Paratype ZIN 46826, male, 96 mm SL, 54 ° 12 ' S, 40 °02' W, Shag Rocks, South Georgia, FR/V Walther Herwig , Stn. 97 –II /76, 3 January 1976, 2600 m. Diagnosis. Vertebrae 79, dorsal fin rays ~ 71, anal fin rays ~ 67, pyloric caeca 5 or 6. Teeth simple, sharp, lanceolate. HL 19 % SL. Gill opening completely above the pectoral fin. Tail long, slender. Radials two (2 +0+0), round, unnotched; scapula and coracoid helves long. Stomach black, pyloric caeca brown. Description. Counts: V 79, D ~ 71, A ~ 67, C 5, P 17–18, radials 2, pc 5 or 6, pores unknown. Ratios: HL 19.3 % SL, E 5.5, orbit 6.2, uj 9.9, go 4.2, UPL 14.1, preD 22.7, preA 29.4, ma 15.1, aAf 14.5, pabd 18.7. In % HL: E 28.7, orbit 32.3, uj 51.4, go 21.9, UPL 73.2, preD 117.8, preA 152.6, aAf 75.3, pabd 97.2. Head small, short, dorsal profile almost flat, sloping evenly downward anteriorly at an angle of about 45 ° to snout. Snout damaged, blunt, apparently slightly protruding. Nostrils damaged, apparently close to eye and above level of mid pupil. Mouth horizontal, terminal; oral cleft extending almost to below posterior margin of orbit, upper jaw extending to below rear of eye. Teeth in both jaws lanceolate, sharp canines, in about 23 irregular oblique rows of up to four teeth each. Symphyseal gap present in upper jaw, almost forming a notch into which symphysis of lower jaw fits. Symphysis of lower jaw with a distinct knob. Eyes damaged, pupil apparently large. Gill opening completely above pectoral fin base, relatively long; opercular flap lobate, formed by broad, dorsally curved opercle. Pore formula unknown, chin pores apparently moderately large, separated by symphyseal knob. Pectoral fin probably deeply notched, upper ray about on horizontal above lower margin of orbit. Upper lobe rays reaching distinctly behind end of abdominal cavity and origin of anal fin; lower lobe ray lengths unknown. Pectoral fin with 11 + 2–3 + 4 rays, none rudimentary; spacing of notch rays very wide, much wider than that of upper and lower lobe rays. Pectoral girdle strongly cartilaginous and poorly calcified, difficult to stain with alizarin. Radials 2 (2 +0+0) round, unnotched. Scapula and coracoid both with long helves. Coracoid notch absent. Trunk low, tail elongated. Vertebrae 9 + 70. Dorsal fin origin between vertebrae 4–5; anal fin origin between vertebrae 8–9. Anus anterior to gill opening, below anterior end of opercle. Abdominal cavity unusually short, its length only about 19 % of SL behind pectoral symphysis. Pyloric caeca apparently four, digitate. Tail unusually long, tapering to an almost filamentous end. Hypural completely fused; caudal of 1 + 2 / 2 rays, their bases occupying entire margin of hypural. Color of body unknown, almost entirely skinned; shreds of remaining thin translucent skin suggest it was dark brown. Head darker, its sides and lower jaw black, probably reflecting entirely black jaws, gums, and orobranchial cavity. Peritoneum and stomach black, pyloric caeca brown. Distribution. Known from a single specimen collected in the Bounty Trough at 2786–2821 m. Etymology. From the Greek pseudes , false, and kreffti , the specific epithet of Paraliparis kreffti , the species most similar to it. Comparisons. The new species is similar to P. k re ff t i Andriashev 1986 —so similar that it merits the name P. pseudokreffti . It has only two radials, four principal caudal fin rays, a similar pectoral fin ray arrangement, and a black peritoneum and stomach. The proportions of the two species are also similar. It differs and is clearly distinct from P. kreffti in having 79 (9 + 70) vertebrae (vs 71–77), D~ 71 (vs 64–66), ~A 67 (vs 59–60), fewer pyloric caeca (5 or 6 vs 9), a slightly shorter head (19 vs 21–23 % SL), scapular helve shape (long vs short and stout), gill opening (completely above the pectoral fin vs above and extending ventrally over 1–3 rays), and more elongate tail. Finally, it is from the Bounty Trough, east of New Zealand, whereas P. kreffti is known from the opposite side of Antarctica in the Weddell Sea and the Antarctic Peninsula. Paraliparis pseudokreffti is also similar to P. bipolaris Andriashev 1997 from the northeast Atlantic (considered by Andriashev, 2003: 300, as a sister species to P. k re f f t i ), but differs from it in having more vertebrae (79 vs 76–77), a smaller eye (28 vs 35 % HL), longer upper jaw (51 vs 42 % HL), and many other proportions just outside those of P. bipolaris . Paraliparis pseudokreffti differs from all the Australian species with two radials (see Stein et al. 2001) in number of vertebrae and fin rays: vertebrae (79 vs 66–69), dorsal fin rays (~ 71 vs 60–64), anal fin rays (~ 67 vs 53–57), pectoral fin rays (17–18 vs 19–22), and caudal fin rays (4 vs 8). Comments. Andriashev (2003) redescribed P. kreffti based on new material that differed significantly in some regards from the types (which were juveniles) but that he considered to be adults. I suggest that P. pseudokreffti , P. kreffti , and P. b i po la r is form a group whose precise relationships remain to be clarified when more material becomes available. : Published as part of Stein, David L., 2012, A Review of the Snailfishes (Liparidae, Scorpaeniformes) of New Zealand, Including Descriptions of a New Genus and Sixteen New Species, pp. 1-54 in Zootaxa 3588 on pages 29-31, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.283120 : {"references": ["Andriashev, A. P. (1986) Review of the snailfish genus Paraliparis (Scorpaeniformes: Liparididae) of the Southern Ocean. Theses Zoologicae 7. Koeltz, Koenigstein. 204 pp.", "Andriashev, A. P. (1997) Paraliparis bipolaris sp. n. from the Northeastern Atlantic, similar to the Antarctic P. kreffti (Liparidae, Scorpaeniformes). Voprosy Ikhtiologii, 37 (2), 261 - 264. In Russian. English translation in Journal of Ichthyology, 37 (2), 196 - 199.", "Andriashev, A. P. (2003) Liparid fishes (Liparidae, Scorpaeniformes) of the Southern Ocean and adjacent waters. Biological Results of the Russian Antarctic Expeditions 9. Explorations of the Fauna of the Seas, (53) 61, 1 - 476. In Russian, with English summary.", "Stein, D. L., Chernova, N. V. & Andriashev, A. P. (2001) Snailfishes (Pisces: Liparidae) of Australia, including descriptions of thirty new species. Records of the Australian Museum, 2001 (53), 341 - 406."]}
format Text
author Stein, David L.
author_facet Stein, David L.
author_sort Stein, David L.
title Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.
title_short Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.
title_full Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.
title_fullStr Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp.
title_sort paraliparis pseudokreffti stein, 2012, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6173267
https://zenodo.org/record/6173267
long_lat ENVELOPE(-42.033,-42.033,-53.550,-53.550)
ENVELOPE(178.070,178.070,-45.499,-45.499)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Weddell Sea
New Zealand
Weddell
Shag Rocks
Bounty Trough
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Weddell Sea
New Zealand
Weddell
Shag Rocks
Bounty Trough
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Northeast Atlantic
Southern Ocean
Weddell Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Northeast Atlantic
Southern Ocean
Weddell Sea
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6173267 2023-05-15T13:49:52+02:00 Paraliparis pseudokreffti Stein, 2012, n. sp. Stein, David L. 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6173267 https://zenodo.org/record/6173267 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF8DFFA9FF95AF5FFFF81514FFE2152A http://zoobank.org/110CF2CD-97B8-447A-A183-1218D23C1B61 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.283120 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF8DFFA9FF95AF5FFFF81514FFE2152A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.283142 http://zoobank.org/110CF2CD-97B8-447A-A183-1218D23C1B61 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6173268 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 Scorpaeniformes Liparidae Paraliparis Paraliparis pseudokreffti article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6173267 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.283120 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.283142 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6173268 2022-04-01T11:22:46Z Paraliparis pseudokreffti n. sp. Fig. 23 Holotype. NMNZ P.038023, female, 128 mm SL, 136 mm TL, 46 ° 38.80 ' S, 178 ° 30.03 ' E, Bounty Trough, R/V Tangaroa , Stn. TAN 0 116, 10 October 2001, 2786– 2821 m. NMNZ P.038023/ 1, cleared and stained right pectoral girdle. Comparative material. P. kreffti Paratype ZIN 46826, male, 96 mm SL, 54 ° 12 ' S, 40 °02' W, Shag Rocks, South Georgia, FR/V Walther Herwig , Stn. 97 –II /76, 3 January 1976, 2600 m. Diagnosis. Vertebrae 79, dorsal fin rays ~ 71, anal fin rays ~ 67, pyloric caeca 5 or 6. Teeth simple, sharp, lanceolate. HL 19 % SL. Gill opening completely above the pectoral fin. Tail long, slender. Radials two (2 +0+0), round, unnotched; scapula and coracoid helves long. Stomach black, pyloric caeca brown. Description. Counts: V 79, D ~ 71, A ~ 67, C 5, P 17–18, radials 2, pc 5 or 6, pores unknown. Ratios: HL 19.3 % SL, E 5.5, orbit 6.2, uj 9.9, go 4.2, UPL 14.1, preD 22.7, preA 29.4, ma 15.1, aAf 14.5, pabd 18.7. In % HL: E 28.7, orbit 32.3, uj 51.4, go 21.9, UPL 73.2, preD 117.8, preA 152.6, aAf 75.3, pabd 97.2. Head small, short, dorsal profile almost flat, sloping evenly downward anteriorly at an angle of about 45 ° to snout. Snout damaged, blunt, apparently slightly protruding. Nostrils damaged, apparently close to eye and above level of mid pupil. Mouth horizontal, terminal; oral cleft extending almost to below posterior margin of orbit, upper jaw extending to below rear of eye. Teeth in both jaws lanceolate, sharp canines, in about 23 irregular oblique rows of up to four teeth each. Symphyseal gap present in upper jaw, almost forming a notch into which symphysis of lower jaw fits. Symphysis of lower jaw with a distinct knob. Eyes damaged, pupil apparently large. Gill opening completely above pectoral fin base, relatively long; opercular flap lobate, formed by broad, dorsally curved opercle. Pore formula unknown, chin pores apparently moderately large, separated by symphyseal knob. Pectoral fin probably deeply notched, upper ray about on horizontal above lower margin of orbit. Upper lobe rays reaching distinctly behind end of abdominal cavity and origin of anal fin; lower lobe ray lengths unknown. Pectoral fin with 11 + 2–3 + 4 rays, none rudimentary; spacing of notch rays very wide, much wider than that of upper and lower lobe rays. Pectoral girdle strongly cartilaginous and poorly calcified, difficult to stain with alizarin. Radials 2 (2 +0+0) round, unnotched. Scapula and coracoid both with long helves. Coracoid notch absent. Trunk low, tail elongated. Vertebrae 9 + 70. Dorsal fin origin between vertebrae 4–5; anal fin origin between vertebrae 8–9. Anus anterior to gill opening, below anterior end of opercle. Abdominal cavity unusually short, its length only about 19 % of SL behind pectoral symphysis. Pyloric caeca apparently four, digitate. Tail unusually long, tapering to an almost filamentous end. Hypural completely fused; caudal of 1 + 2 / 2 rays, their bases occupying entire margin of hypural. Color of body unknown, almost entirely skinned; shreds of remaining thin translucent skin suggest it was dark brown. Head darker, its sides and lower jaw black, probably reflecting entirely black jaws, gums, and orobranchial cavity. Peritoneum and stomach black, pyloric caeca brown. Distribution. Known from a single specimen collected in the Bounty Trough at 2786–2821 m. Etymology. From the Greek pseudes , false, and kreffti , the specific epithet of Paraliparis kreffti , the species most similar to it. Comparisons. The new species is similar to P. k re ff t i Andriashev 1986 —so similar that it merits the name P. pseudokreffti . It has only two radials, four principal caudal fin rays, a similar pectoral fin ray arrangement, and a black peritoneum and stomach. The proportions of the two species are also similar. It differs and is clearly distinct from P. kreffti in having 79 (9 + 70) vertebrae (vs 71–77), D~ 71 (vs 64–66), ~A 67 (vs 59–60), fewer pyloric caeca (5 or 6 vs 9), a slightly shorter head (19 vs 21–23 % SL), scapular helve shape (long vs short and stout), gill opening (completely above the pectoral fin vs above and extending ventrally over 1–3 rays), and more elongate tail. Finally, it is from the Bounty Trough, east of New Zealand, whereas P. kreffti is known from the opposite side of Antarctica in the Weddell Sea and the Antarctic Peninsula. Paraliparis pseudokreffti is also similar to P. bipolaris Andriashev 1997 from the northeast Atlantic (considered by Andriashev, 2003: 300, as a sister species to P. k re f f t i ), but differs from it in having more vertebrae (79 vs 76–77), a smaller eye (28 vs 35 % HL), longer upper jaw (51 vs 42 % HL), and many other proportions just outside those of P. bipolaris . Paraliparis pseudokreffti differs from all the Australian species with two radials (see Stein et al. 2001) in number of vertebrae and fin rays: vertebrae (79 vs 66–69), dorsal fin rays (~ 71 vs 60–64), anal fin rays (~ 67 vs 53–57), pectoral fin rays (17–18 vs 19–22), and caudal fin rays (4 vs 8). Comments. Andriashev (2003) redescribed P. kreffti based on new material that differed significantly in some regards from the types (which were juveniles) but that he considered to be adults. I suggest that P. pseudokreffti , P. kreffti , and P. b i po la r is form a group whose precise relationships remain to be clarified when more material becomes available. : Published as part of Stein, David L., 2012, A Review of the Snailfishes (Liparidae, Scorpaeniformes) of New Zealand, Including Descriptions of a New Genus and Sixteen New Species, pp. 1-54 in Zootaxa 3588 on pages 29-31, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.283120 : {"references": ["Andriashev, A. P. (1986) Review of the snailfish genus Paraliparis (Scorpaeniformes: Liparididae) of the Southern Ocean. Theses Zoologicae 7. Koeltz, Koenigstein. 204 pp.", "Andriashev, A. P. (1997) Paraliparis bipolaris sp. n. from the Northeastern Atlantic, similar to the Antarctic P. kreffti (Liparidae, Scorpaeniformes). Voprosy Ikhtiologii, 37 (2), 261 - 264. In Russian. English translation in Journal of Ichthyology, 37 (2), 196 - 199.", "Andriashev, A. P. (2003) Liparid fishes (Liparidae, Scorpaeniformes) of the Southern Ocean and adjacent waters. Biological Results of the Russian Antarctic Expeditions 9. Explorations of the Fauna of the Seas, (53) 61, 1 - 476. In Russian, with English summary.", "Stein, D. L., Chernova, N. V. & Andriashev, A. P. (2001) Snailfishes (Pisces: Liparidae) of Australia, including descriptions of thirty new species. Records of the Australian Museum, 2001 (53), 341 - 406."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica Northeast Atlantic Southern Ocean Weddell Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Weddell Sea New Zealand Weddell Shag Rocks ENVELOPE(-42.033,-42.033,-53.550,-53.550) Bounty Trough ENVELOPE(178.070,178.070,-45.499,-45.499)