Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.

Seleniolycus pectoralis sp. nov. (Figs. 2, 3b, 4). Materials. Holotype: NMNZ P.40591, 380 mm SL, male, Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, north of Balleny and Scott Islands (64°40.0' to 64°42.3'S, 176°32.0' to 176°44.6'E), depth 1948-2594 m, longline, FV Avro Chieftain, Gerald Anderson, st...

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Main Authors: Møller, Peter R., Stewart, Andrew L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2006
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256860
https://zenodo.org/record/6256860
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6256860
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
Zoarcidae
Seleniolycus
Seleniolycus pectoralis
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Perciformes
Zoarcidae
Seleniolycus
Seleniolycus pectoralis
Møller, Peter R.
Stewart, Andrew L.
Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Perciformes
Zoarcidae
Seleniolycus
Seleniolycus pectoralis
description Seleniolycus pectoralis sp. nov. (Figs. 2, 3b, 4). Materials. Holotype: NMNZ P.40591, 380 mm SL, male, Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, north of Balleny and Scott Islands (64°40.0' to 64°42.3'S, 176°32.0' to 176°44.6'E), depth 1948-2594 m, longline, FV Avro Chieftain, Gerald Anderson, stn. OBS 1742/067, 27 March 2003. Paratypes: (n = 3): NMNZ P.40595 (2 specimens), 315 mm SL, male, and +350 mm SL (tip of tail missing), female, same data as for holotype; NMNZ P.42283, 380 mm SL, female, Pacific-Antarctic Ridge (63°39'S, 173°04'E), depth 2267 m, longline, FV San Aotea II, Simon Beatson, stn. OBS 1430/231R, 9 May 2001. Diagnosis. Differs from congeners by having ventralmost pectoral fin rays exserted, scales present on posterior 2/5 of body, dorsal fin rays 76-80, and anal fin rays 64-66. It is further diagnosed by the following combination of characters: suborbital head pores 6-7, preoperculomandibular pores 8; predorsal length 28.0-30.7% SL; snout length 28.3-36.6% HL, eye diameter 9.4-12.0% HL; pectoral fin rays 14-16; anterior dorsal fin pterygiophore associated with vertebra 6-7; vertebrae 23-27 + 61-63 = 86-89. Description. Principal counts and measurements are presented in Table 1. Vertebral centra symmetrical, with prezygapophyses and postzygapophyses of equal horizontal length. Anal fin pterygiophores 3 (3-4), inserted anterior to haemal spine of first caudal vertebra. Caudal fin with 1 epural, 4 upper and 5 lower hypural rays. Epipleural ribs on 3 (3-4) to penultimate precaudal vertebra. Gill rakers on outer surface of first gill arch simple (not furcate) and with spinules. Branchiostegal rays 6. Pectoral fin wedge-shaped; its origin below body midline; lower rays thickened, exserted. Pelvic fin absent. Body elongate; trunk relatively robust, tail laterally compressed. Head ovoid, robust; anterior profile of snout almost vertical. Eyes relatively large, circular, not reaching dorsal profile of head. Mouth subterminal; lower lips without lateral lobe, upper lip continuous across snout. Snout blunt, upper jaw slightly longer than lower jaw, reaching past middle of eye. Nasal tube well developed, but not reaching upper lip. Gill slit large, extending ventrally to level of lower pectoral fin base or just below. Opercular lobe at dorsal margin of gill slit, angular and relatively prominent. Jaw, vomer and palatine teeth small and conical. Premaxilla with 3 (2-3) rows. Dentary with 4 (3-4) rows of teeth anteriorly, blending into two rows posteriorly. Vomerine teeth in 4 (3-5) rows. Palatine teeth in 3 (3-4) rows. Head pores moderate in size; minor variation in numbers observed. Postorbital pores 2 (2-3), located at positions 1, 4 and sometimes 3 (sensu Gosztonyi, 1977); nasal pores 2, one set anteromesial to nasal tube, the other posteromesially; suborbital pores 7 (6-7); preoperculomandibular pores 8, 4 arising from dentary, 1 from anguloarticular and 3 from preopercle; occipital and interorbital pores absent. Main body lateral line mediolateral, complete to tail tip. Short dorsolateral branch extending from above opercular lobe to near origin of dorsal fin; predorsal branch with widely separated neuromasts extending from above opercular lobe to near caudal fin. Head and anterior body naked; posterior ca. 40%, covered with small cycloid scales. Dorsal and anal fins naked anteriorly, posteriorly 1/4 scaled, caudal fin naked. Colour. Body and head in preserved specimens light to medium brown, with darker dorsal and anal fin margins, pectoral fin and nasal tubes (Fig. 2). Peritoneum dark brown, orobranchial chamber and gill rakers pale. Sexual dimorphism. The few specimens available are insufficient for analyses of sexual dimorphism. Reproduction. None of the specimens are ripening. Etymology. Name refers to the pectoral fin morphology, with ventral rays thickened and exserted, a unique character in the genus. Distribution and habitat. Currently known from only four specimens, caught at two positions along the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge (64°42.3'S, 176°44.6'E and 63°39'S, 173°04'E), at depths of 1948-2594 m (Fig. 4). Comparison with congeners. Seleniolycus pectoralis is very similar to S. robertsi in having scales on the posterior part of the body (vs. absent in S. laevifasciatus), a relatively long predorsal distance (28.0-30.7 and 27.1-36.4% SL vs. 20.0-23.8% SL in S. laevifasciatus), and in the number of suborbital head pores (6-7 and 6 vs. 5 in S. laevifasciatus). Seleniolycus pectoralis differs, however, from both S. robertsi and S. laevifasciatus by the wedge-shaped pectoral fin, with exserted lower rays (vs. with no exserted rays) (Fig. 3), and in the more robust head and body which is expressed in several morphometric characters (Table 1). Seleniolycus pectoralis further differs from S. robertsi in having a longer pre-scaled distance (58.7-61.8% SL vs. 48.9-55.4% SL) and a larger head (19.8-24.6% SL vs. 16.1-18.8% SL). : Published as part of Peter R. Møller & Andrew L. Stewart, 2006, Two new species of eelpouts (Teleostei, Zoarcidae) of the genus Seleniolycus from the Ross Dependency, Antarctica., pp. 53-67 in Zootaxa 1376 on pages 58-60
format Text
author Møller, Peter R.
Stewart, Andrew L.
author_facet Møller, Peter R.
Stewart, Andrew L.
author_sort Møller, Peter R.
title Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
title_short Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
title_full Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
title_fullStr Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
title_full_unstemmed Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
title_sort seleniolycus pectoralis møller & stewart, 2006, sp. nov.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2006
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256860
https://zenodo.org/record/6256860
long_lat ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,-60.000,-60.000)
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
Ross Dependency
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
Ross Dependency
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ross Dependency
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ross Dependency
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/A9DFACE65CD8B5699C7B14904F2710AC
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https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
http://publication.plazi.org/id/A9DFACE65CD8B5699C7B14904F2710AC
http://zoobank.org/11741E58-3C03-4BDC-870D-37203918F20A
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256861
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256860
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6256860 2023-05-15T14:06:38+02:00 Seleniolycus pectoralis Møller & Stewart, 2006, sp. nov. Møller, Peter R. Stewart, Andrew L. 2006 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256860 https://zenodo.org/record/6256860 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/A9DFACE65CD8B5699C7B14904F2710AC http://zoobank.org/11741E58-3C03-4BDC-870D-37203918F20A https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit http://publication.plazi.org/id/A9DFACE65CD8B5699C7B14904F2710AC http://zoobank.org/11741E58-3C03-4BDC-870D-37203918F20A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256861 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 Zoarcidae Seleniolycus Seleniolycus pectoralis article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2006 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256860 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6256861 2022-04-01T12:23:58Z Seleniolycus pectoralis sp. nov. (Figs. 2, 3b, 4). Materials. Holotype: NMNZ P.40591, 380 mm SL, male, Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, north of Balleny and Scott Islands (64°40.0' to 64°42.3'S, 176°32.0' to 176°44.6'E), depth 1948-2594 m, longline, FV Avro Chieftain, Gerald Anderson, stn. OBS 1742/067, 27 March 2003. Paratypes: (n = 3): NMNZ P.40595 (2 specimens), 315 mm SL, male, and +350 mm SL (tip of tail missing), female, same data as for holotype; NMNZ P.42283, 380 mm SL, female, Pacific-Antarctic Ridge (63°39'S, 173°04'E), depth 2267 m, longline, FV San Aotea II, Simon Beatson, stn. OBS 1430/231R, 9 May 2001. Diagnosis. Differs from congeners by having ventralmost pectoral fin rays exserted, scales present on posterior 2/5 of body, dorsal fin rays 76-80, and anal fin rays 64-66. It is further diagnosed by the following combination of characters: suborbital head pores 6-7, preoperculomandibular pores 8; predorsal length 28.0-30.7% SL; snout length 28.3-36.6% HL, eye diameter 9.4-12.0% HL; pectoral fin rays 14-16; anterior dorsal fin pterygiophore associated with vertebra 6-7; vertebrae 23-27 + 61-63 = 86-89. Description. Principal counts and measurements are presented in Table 1. Vertebral centra symmetrical, with prezygapophyses and postzygapophyses of equal horizontal length. Anal fin pterygiophores 3 (3-4), inserted anterior to haemal spine of first caudal vertebra. Caudal fin with 1 epural, 4 upper and 5 lower hypural rays. Epipleural ribs on 3 (3-4) to penultimate precaudal vertebra. Gill rakers on outer surface of first gill arch simple (not furcate) and with spinules. Branchiostegal rays 6. Pectoral fin wedge-shaped; its origin below body midline; lower rays thickened, exserted. Pelvic fin absent. Body elongate; trunk relatively robust, tail laterally compressed. Head ovoid, robust; anterior profile of snout almost vertical. Eyes relatively large, circular, not reaching dorsal profile of head. Mouth subterminal; lower lips without lateral lobe, upper lip continuous across snout. Snout blunt, upper jaw slightly longer than lower jaw, reaching past middle of eye. Nasal tube well developed, but not reaching upper lip. Gill slit large, extending ventrally to level of lower pectoral fin base or just below. Opercular lobe at dorsal margin of gill slit, angular and relatively prominent. Jaw, vomer and palatine teeth small and conical. Premaxilla with 3 (2-3) rows. Dentary with 4 (3-4) rows of teeth anteriorly, blending into two rows posteriorly. Vomerine teeth in 4 (3-5) rows. Palatine teeth in 3 (3-4) rows. Head pores moderate in size; minor variation in numbers observed. Postorbital pores 2 (2-3), located at positions 1, 4 and sometimes 3 (sensu Gosztonyi, 1977); nasal pores 2, one set anteromesial to nasal tube, the other posteromesially; suborbital pores 7 (6-7); preoperculomandibular pores 8, 4 arising from dentary, 1 from anguloarticular and 3 from preopercle; occipital and interorbital pores absent. Main body lateral line mediolateral, complete to tail tip. Short dorsolateral branch extending from above opercular lobe to near origin of dorsal fin; predorsal branch with widely separated neuromasts extending from above opercular lobe to near caudal fin. Head and anterior body naked; posterior ca. 40%, covered with small cycloid scales. Dorsal and anal fins naked anteriorly, posteriorly 1/4 scaled, caudal fin naked. Colour. Body and head in preserved specimens light to medium brown, with darker dorsal and anal fin margins, pectoral fin and nasal tubes (Fig. 2). Peritoneum dark brown, orobranchial chamber and gill rakers pale. Sexual dimorphism. The few specimens available are insufficient for analyses of sexual dimorphism. Reproduction. None of the specimens are ripening. Etymology. Name refers to the pectoral fin morphology, with ventral rays thickened and exserted, a unique character in the genus. Distribution and habitat. Currently known from only four specimens, caught at two positions along the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge (64°42.3'S, 176°44.6'E and 63°39'S, 173°04'E), at depths of 1948-2594 m (Fig. 4). Comparison with congeners. Seleniolycus pectoralis is very similar to S. robertsi in having scales on the posterior part of the body (vs. absent in S. laevifasciatus), a relatively long predorsal distance (28.0-30.7 and 27.1-36.4% SL vs. 20.0-23.8% SL in S. laevifasciatus), and in the number of suborbital head pores (6-7 and 6 vs. 5 in S. laevifasciatus). Seleniolycus pectoralis differs, however, from both S. robertsi and S. laevifasciatus by the wedge-shaped pectoral fin, with exserted lower rays (vs. with no exserted rays) (Fig. 3), and in the more robust head and body which is expressed in several morphometric characters (Table 1). Seleniolycus pectoralis further differs from S. robertsi in having a longer pre-scaled distance (58.7-61.8% SL vs. 48.9-55.4% SL) and a larger head (19.8-24.6% SL vs. 16.1-18.8% SL). : Published as part of Peter R. Møller & Andrew L. Stewart, 2006, Two new species of eelpouts (Teleostei, Zoarcidae) of the genus Seleniolycus from the Ross Dependency, Antarctica., pp. 53-67 in Zootaxa 1376 on pages 58-60 Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ross Dependency DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Pacific Ross Dependency ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,-60.000,-60.000)