Kali Lloyd 1909

Kali Lloyd 1909 Snake-toothed swallowers Kali Lloyd 1909: 154 –155, Plate 45 [type species: Kali indica Lloyd 1909, by original designation; gender: Feminine]. Odontonema Weber 1913: 149 [type species: Odontonema kerberti Weber 1913, by original designation]. Dolichodon Parr 1931 a: 45 – 4, not Doli...

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Main Author: Melo, Marcelo R. S.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2008
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235957
https://zenodo.org/record/6235957
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6235957
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
Perciformes
Chiasmodontidae
Kali
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Perciformes
Chiasmodontidae
Kali
Melo, Marcelo R. S.
Kali Lloyd 1909
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Perciformes
Chiasmodontidae
Kali
description Kali Lloyd 1909 Snake-toothed swallowers Kali Lloyd 1909: 154 –155, Plate 45 [type species: Kali indica Lloyd 1909, by original designation; gender: Feminine]. Odontonema Weber 1913: 149 [type species: Odontonema kerberti Weber 1913, by original designation]. Dolichodon Parr 1931 a: 45 – 4, not Dolichodon Gray 1865; not Dolicodon Frazango 1874 [type species: Dolichodon normani Parr 1931, by original designation]. Hemicyclodon Parr 1931 b: 162 [substitute name for Dolichodon , preoccupied]. Gargaropteron Smith 1965: 569, figure 1 [type species: Gargaropteron pterodactylops Smith 1965, by original designation]. Diagnosis. The genus Kali is diagnosed from Chiasmodon , Dysalotus and Pseudoscopelus by three characteristics: branchiostegal rays six ( vs. branchiostegal rays seven); the presence of strikingly recurved teeth in the mesial series of both premaxilla and dentary ( vs. teeth in mesial series of dentary and premaxilla straight or slightly curved, never recurved); and a unique type of tooth attachment to bone, the ventral attachment, that connects the ventral basis of the tooth to the dentigerous area of denary and premaxilla, allowing the rotation on a reflex angle of up to 270 o on its own axis ( vs. tooth completely ankylosed to bone, or with posterior attachment that allows deflection but not allows tooth rotation; for further discussion on other types of tooth attachment among the teleosts see Fink 1981 and Huysseune & Sire 1998). Kali can be further diagnosed from Dysalotus by dentition in two rows ( vs. dentition in three series of several rows); and prickles on flank absent ( vs. prickles on flank present). From Chiasmodon and Pseudoscopelus , by the cranium fragile with bone trabeculae of frontals easily distinguishable with naked eye ( vs. bones forming cranium well calcified with trabeculae not apparent); nasal weakly calcified, circular but not spoon-shaped, positioned in the dorsal part of the snout, and covered by pigmented skin ( vs. nasal spoon-shaped in the lateral or anterior sides of the snout, covered by thin transparent skin); parietals small, with less than half the size of supraoccipital ( vs. parietals enlarged, of same size or little smaller than supraoccipital); pre- and postzygapophyses absent ( vs. pre- and postzygapophyses present); elongate neuromasts in head absent ( vs. enlarged elongated neuromasts exposed in surface of head, over supraoccipital, parietals, frontals and pterotic cranial bones, face, snout, and lower jaw); last scale of lateral line contiguous with penultimate scale ( vs. last scale of the lateral line well separated from the penultimate scale and positioned on lower lobe of the caudal fin). Description. Dentition and color patterns detailed in species accounts. Body elongate, laterally compressed. Greatest body depth at origin of first dorsal fin. Scales absent, except for lateral-line scales, embedded in skin. Anterior profile of head elongate, concave in lateral view, snout pointed or slightly concave. Bones of head remarkably fragile, with bone trabecules visible by naked eye. Head with cavernous appearance, with dorsal concavity at level of braincase medially and well developed crests in frontals, extending laterally to concavity in posterior part of cranium, and converging at level of posterior naris; foramina of sensorial system of head wide. Lower jaw projecting anterior to upper jaw, slightly arched in Kali colubrina , K. macrura , and K. parri , and moderately arched in K. indica , K. falx , K. kerberti , and K. macrodon upper jaw slightly arched in K. colubrina , K. macrura , and K. parri , and moderately arched in K. indica , K. falx , K. kerberti , and K. macrodon . Ascending process of premaxilla flat in K. colubrina , K. falx , K. indica , K. parri , K. macrura , and with anterior concavity in K. macrodon and K. kerberti . Orbit circular, nares oval, and distinctly separated. Rays of fins fragile and often broken, few specimens available with fins intact; pectoral fin insertion lateral on body, posterior to angle of opercle; pelvic fin insertion ventral, below or slightly anterior to pectoral fin. Dorsal fins two, true spines ( sensu Johnson & Patterson 1993) present only in first dorsal fin; last spine of first dorsal fin frequently embedded in skin. Anal fin opposite to second dorsal fin, lacking true spines. Caudal fin forked, lacking true spines. Gill arches four, with poorly developed filaments; pseudobranchia present. Epibranchial of first arch attached to opercle until midline; ceratobranchial of second, third and fourth arches linked; fourth gill arch mostly attached to body wall, except for oval slit in ceratobranchial. Distribution. World-wide, in the Atlantic, Indian, Pacific, and Southern Ocean, from 53 ° N to 60 ° S. Etymology. Named after Kali, a Hindu goddess. Remarks. The skin of Kali is very delicate and missing in the majority of the examined specimens; in most specimens only the dermis is preserved, but the epidermis is completely gone; in others, even dermis is destroyed. With the exception of the type series of K. parri , no other specimen examined has the skin fully preserved on the head; therefore a precise count of pores in the dorsal part of head was not possible. : Published as part of Melo, Marcelo R. S., 2008, The genus Kali Lloyd (Chiasmodontidae: Teleostei) with description of new two species, and the revalidation of K. kerberti Weber, pp. 1-33 in Zootaxa 1747 on pages 3-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.181658 : {"references": ["Lloyd, R. E. (1909) A description of the deep-sea fish caught by the R. I. M. S. ship Investigator since the year 1900, with supposed evidence of mutation in Malthopsis. Memoirs of the Indian Museum, 2, 139 - 180.", "Weber, M. (1913) Die Fische der Siboga-Expedition. Leiden, E. J. Brill, Fische Siboga Expedition: i - xii + 1 - 710, Pls. 1 - 12.", "Parr, A. E. (1931 a) Deepsea fishes from off the western coast of North and Central America. With keys to the genera Stomias, Diplophos, Melamphaes and Bregmaceros, and a revision of the Macropterus group of the genus Lampanyctus. Bulletin of the Bingham Oceanographic Collection, 2, 1 - 53.", "Gray, J. E. (1865) Notes on the whales of the Cape. Proceedings of the Zoological Society London, 1865, 357 - 359.", "Parr, A. E. (1931 b) A substitute name for Dolichodon Parr, a genus of deep-sea fishes. Copeia, 1931, 162.", "Smith, J. L. B. (1965) An interesting new fish of the family Chiasmodontidae from South Africa, with redescription of Odontonema kerberti Weber, 1913. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 13, 7, 567 - 574.", "Fink, W. L. (1981) Ontogeny and phylogeny of tooth attachment modes in actinopterygian fishes. Journal of Morphology, 167, 167 - 184.", "Huyssene, A. & Sire, J-Y. (1998) Evolution pattern and processes in teeth and tooth-related tissues in non-mammalian vertebrates. European Journal of Oral Sciences, 106 (suppl. 1), 437 - 481.", "Johnson, G. D. & Patterson, C. (1993) Percomorph phylogeny: a survey of acanthomorphs and a new proposal. Bulletin of Marine Science, 52, 554 - 626."]}
format Text
author Melo, Marcelo R. S.
author_facet Melo, Marcelo R. S.
author_sort Melo, Marcelo R. S.
title Kali Lloyd 1909
title_short Kali Lloyd 1909
title_full Kali Lloyd 1909
title_fullStr Kali Lloyd 1909
title_full_unstemmed Kali Lloyd 1909
title_sort kali lloyd 1909
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2008
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235957
https://zenodo.org/record/6235957
long_lat ENVELOPE(158.167,158.167,-81.450,-81.450)
ENVELOPE(-63.400,-63.400,-69.400,-69.400)
ENVELOPE(144.648,144.648,59.871,59.871)
geographic Southern Ocean
Pacific
Indian
Nares
Bingham
Kali
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Pacific
Indian
Nares
Bingham
Kali
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/6973FFA86B49FFDC604DFFE62C3DCA42
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op_rights Open Access
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235957
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6235957 2023-05-15T18:26:09+02:00 Kali Lloyd 1909 Melo, Marcelo R. S. 2008 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235957 https://zenodo.org/record/6235957 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/6973FFA86B49FFDC604DFFE62C3DCA42 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.181658 http://publication.plazi.org/id/6973FFA86B49FFDC604DFFE62C3DCA42 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235956 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 Perciformes Chiasmodontidae Kali article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2008 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235957 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.181658 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6235956 2022-04-01T12:12:37Z Kali Lloyd 1909 Snake-toothed swallowers Kali Lloyd 1909: 154 –155, Plate 45 [type species: Kali indica Lloyd 1909, by original designation; gender: Feminine]. Odontonema Weber 1913: 149 [type species: Odontonema kerberti Weber 1913, by original designation]. Dolichodon Parr 1931 a: 45 – 4, not Dolichodon Gray 1865; not Dolicodon Frazango 1874 [type species: Dolichodon normani Parr 1931, by original designation]. Hemicyclodon Parr 1931 b: 162 [substitute name for Dolichodon , preoccupied]. Gargaropteron Smith 1965: 569, figure 1 [type species: Gargaropteron pterodactylops Smith 1965, by original designation]. Diagnosis. The genus Kali is diagnosed from Chiasmodon , Dysalotus and Pseudoscopelus by three characteristics: branchiostegal rays six ( vs. branchiostegal rays seven); the presence of strikingly recurved teeth in the mesial series of both premaxilla and dentary ( vs. teeth in mesial series of dentary and premaxilla straight or slightly curved, never recurved); and a unique type of tooth attachment to bone, the ventral attachment, that connects the ventral basis of the tooth to the dentigerous area of denary and premaxilla, allowing the rotation on a reflex angle of up to 270 o on its own axis ( vs. tooth completely ankylosed to bone, or with posterior attachment that allows deflection but not allows tooth rotation; for further discussion on other types of tooth attachment among the teleosts see Fink 1981 and Huysseune & Sire 1998). Kali can be further diagnosed from Dysalotus by dentition in two rows ( vs. dentition in three series of several rows); and prickles on flank absent ( vs. prickles on flank present). From Chiasmodon and Pseudoscopelus , by the cranium fragile with bone trabeculae of frontals easily distinguishable with naked eye ( vs. bones forming cranium well calcified with trabeculae not apparent); nasal weakly calcified, circular but not spoon-shaped, positioned in the dorsal part of the snout, and covered by pigmented skin ( vs. nasal spoon-shaped in the lateral or anterior sides of the snout, covered by thin transparent skin); parietals small, with less than half the size of supraoccipital ( vs. parietals enlarged, of same size or little smaller than supraoccipital); pre- and postzygapophyses absent ( vs. pre- and postzygapophyses present); elongate neuromasts in head absent ( vs. enlarged elongated neuromasts exposed in surface of head, over supraoccipital, parietals, frontals and pterotic cranial bones, face, snout, and lower jaw); last scale of lateral line contiguous with penultimate scale ( vs. last scale of the lateral line well separated from the penultimate scale and positioned on lower lobe of the caudal fin). Description. Dentition and color patterns detailed in species accounts. Body elongate, laterally compressed. Greatest body depth at origin of first dorsal fin. Scales absent, except for lateral-line scales, embedded in skin. Anterior profile of head elongate, concave in lateral view, snout pointed or slightly concave. Bones of head remarkably fragile, with bone trabecules visible by naked eye. Head with cavernous appearance, with dorsal concavity at level of braincase medially and well developed crests in frontals, extending laterally to concavity in posterior part of cranium, and converging at level of posterior naris; foramina of sensorial system of head wide. Lower jaw projecting anterior to upper jaw, slightly arched in Kali colubrina , K. macrura , and K. parri , and moderately arched in K. indica , K. falx , K. kerberti , and K. macrodon upper jaw slightly arched in K. colubrina , K. macrura , and K. parri , and moderately arched in K. indica , K. falx , K. kerberti , and K. macrodon . Ascending process of premaxilla flat in K. colubrina , K. falx , K. indica , K. parri , K. macrura , and with anterior concavity in K. macrodon and K. kerberti . Orbit circular, nares oval, and distinctly separated. Rays of fins fragile and often broken, few specimens available with fins intact; pectoral fin insertion lateral on body, posterior to angle of opercle; pelvic fin insertion ventral, below or slightly anterior to pectoral fin. Dorsal fins two, true spines ( sensu Johnson & Patterson 1993) present only in first dorsal fin; last spine of first dorsal fin frequently embedded in skin. Anal fin opposite to second dorsal fin, lacking true spines. Caudal fin forked, lacking true spines. Gill arches four, with poorly developed filaments; pseudobranchia present. Epibranchial of first arch attached to opercle until midline; ceratobranchial of second, third and fourth arches linked; fourth gill arch mostly attached to body wall, except for oval slit in ceratobranchial. Distribution. World-wide, in the Atlantic, Indian, Pacific, and Southern Ocean, from 53 ° N to 60 ° S. Etymology. Named after Kali, a Hindu goddess. Remarks. The skin of Kali is very delicate and missing in the majority of the examined specimens; in most specimens only the dermis is preserved, but the epidermis is completely gone; in others, even dermis is destroyed. With the exception of the type series of K. parri , no other specimen examined has the skin fully preserved on the head; therefore a precise count of pores in the dorsal part of head was not possible. : Published as part of Melo, Marcelo R. S., 2008, The genus Kali Lloyd (Chiasmodontidae: Teleostei) with description of new two species, and the revalidation of K. kerberti Weber, pp. 1-33 in Zootaxa 1747 on pages 3-4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.181658 : {"references": ["Lloyd, R. E. (1909) A description of the deep-sea fish caught by the R. I. M. S. ship Investigator since the year 1900, with supposed evidence of mutation in Malthopsis. Memoirs of the Indian Museum, 2, 139 - 180.", "Weber, M. (1913) Die Fische der Siboga-Expedition. Leiden, E. J. Brill, Fische Siboga Expedition: i - xii + 1 - 710, Pls. 1 - 12.", "Parr, A. E. (1931 a) Deepsea fishes from off the western coast of North and Central America. With keys to the genera Stomias, Diplophos, Melamphaes and Bregmaceros, and a revision of the Macropterus group of the genus Lampanyctus. Bulletin of the Bingham Oceanographic Collection, 2, 1 - 53.", "Gray, J. E. (1865) Notes on the whales of the Cape. Proceedings of the Zoological Society London, 1865, 357 - 359.", "Parr, A. E. (1931 b) A substitute name for Dolichodon Parr, a genus of deep-sea fishes. Copeia, 1931, 162.", "Smith, J. L. B. (1965) An interesting new fish of the family Chiasmodontidae from South Africa, with redescription of Odontonema kerberti Weber, 1913. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 13, 7, 567 - 574.", "Fink, W. L. (1981) Ontogeny and phylogeny of tooth attachment modes in actinopterygian fishes. Journal of Morphology, 167, 167 - 184.", "Huyssene, A. & Sire, J-Y. (1998) Evolution pattern and processes in teeth and tooth-related tissues in non-mammalian vertebrates. European Journal of Oral Sciences, 106 (suppl. 1), 437 - 481.", "Johnson, G. D. & Patterson, C. (1993) Percomorph phylogeny: a survey of acanthomorphs and a new proposal. Bulletin of Marine Science, 52, 554 - 626."]} Text Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Southern Ocean Pacific Indian Nares ENVELOPE(158.167,158.167,-81.450,-81.450) Bingham ENVELOPE(-63.400,-63.400,-69.400,-69.400) Kali ENVELOPE(144.648,144.648,59.871,59.871)