Synchiropus valdiviae

Synchiropus valdiviae (Trunov, 1981) (Fig. 1) Presently there are two classifications of dragonets, variously at odds with one another (Fricke 1982, 2002; Nakabo 1982, 1983). Although Nakabo (op. cit.) and Nakabo and Hartel (1999) placed this species in Foetorepus Whitley, we follow Fricke (2002) in...

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Main Authors: M. E. Anderson, D. L. Stein, H. W. Detrich
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265829
https://zenodo.org/record/6265829
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6265829
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
Callionymidae
Synchiropus
Synchiropus valdiviae
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Perciformes
Callionymidae
Synchiropus
Synchiropus valdiviae
M. E. Anderson
D. L. Stein
H. W. Detrich
Synchiropus valdiviae
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Perciformes
Callionymidae
Synchiropus
Synchiropus valdiviae
description Synchiropus valdiviae (Trunov, 1981) (Fig. 1) Presently there are two classifications of dragonets, variously at odds with one another (Fricke 1982, 2002; Nakabo 1982, 1983). Although Nakabo (op. cit.) and Nakabo and Hartel (1999) placed this species in Foetorepus Whitley, we follow Fricke (2002) in placing it in Synchiropus Gill. Two adult females and three juveniles of S. valdiviae were taken in the beam trawl at station 85 just north of Nightingale Island. Originally described from a single adult male from Walvis Ridge, a second male has been discovered, and both are from the same locality (Trunov, 1981; Fricke, 1985, but not a paratype as stated). Our specimens are identified on the basis of their agreement with the two males in several characters which separate the species from other Atlantic congeners (reviewed by Nakabo and Hartel, 1999): their coloration, bowed lateral line, counts and proportions, which separate the species from other Atlantic congeners. Counts and measurements (ranges of the two adult females first, followed in parentheses by juveniles): Vertebrae 7 + 13-14 (7 + 14); D I V, 8 (IV, 8 9); A 7 (7); P 22 (21-22); pelv. I, 5 (I, 5); C ii -iii + 10 + ii (ii -iii + 10 + i -ii); gill rakers 0 + 7 (0 + 7-8); branchiostegal rays 6 (6); pseudobranch filaments 12 (6-7). Following proportions as percent SL: body width 16.8-18.3 (16.1-16.7); body depth 15.3-15.8 (14.9-15.0); caudal peduncle depth 5.9-6.5 (5.7-5.9); predorsal length 30.8-32.1 (30.7-32.1); preanal length 53.9-54.4 (52.4-52.6); caudal fin length 28.6- 30.9 (30.0- 31.2); head length 27.5-27.8 (29.6-30.4); head depth 15.1-17.1 (15.1-16.7); eye diameter 11.3-11.9 (13.1-13.3); snout length 6.5-7.4 (6.3-6.7); upper jaw length 9.7-10.1 (10.2-10.4); interorbital width 2.4-2.5 (1.5-2.2); 1st dorsal spine length 15.4-15.6 (15.3-15.4); 2nd dorsal spine length 11.1-11.9 (12.2); 3rd dorsal spine length 10.0- 0.1 (8.9); 4th dorsal spine length 6.8- 7.0 (7.0-7.1); 1st dorsal ray length 18.1-19.0 (20.5-23.2); last dorsal ray length 18.6- 19.8 (17.8-18.0); 1st anal ray length 9.2-9.4 (10.8-12.0); last anal ray length 19.3-20.0 (20.1- 23.0); 1st to 2nd dorsal distance 6.0-6.2 (6.5-7.0); 1st dorsal base 7.1-7.3 (6.5-6.7); 2nd dorsal base 30.3- 30.5 (28.4-31.3); anal base 23.2-24.0 (20.0-21.6); pectoral base depth 8.6-9.1 (7.8-8.2); pectoral fin length 21.2-21.9 (15.8-19.0); pelvic fin length 27.4-27.9 (29.2-30.7). First dorsal spine not elongate, only very slightly so in juvenile male. Lateral line distinctly bowed on body, sharply descending to midline between third and fifth dorsal rays (Trunov, 1981, shows bow extending to last ray). Anal fin origin on vertical through fourth dorsal ray, not first as stated by Trunov, but illustrated by him under third. Preopercular spine with trifid tip in all. Body reddish with yellow variegations, first dorsal fin membrane dusky except in juvenile male which has a solid black membrane except proximally. Membrane of anal fin with yellowish distal streak. Membrane of second dorsal fin with indistinct yellowish areas. Material: SAIAB 74966 (2 females, 52.7-54.5 mm SL; male, 61.6 mm SL); sta. 85/BT 44; 37° 20.3'S, 12° 30.0'W; 2 m beam trawl; 188-201 m; 12:59-13:11 hrs; 7 July 2004.SAIAB 74969 (2 females, 106.5-116.8 mm SL); sta. 85/BT 45; 37° 19.2'S, 12° 29.9'W; 2 m beam trawl; 210- 223 m; 15:29-15:50 hrs; 7 July 2004. : Published as part of M. E. Anderson, D. L. Stein & H. W. Detrich, 2005, Additions to the ichthyofauna of the Tristan da Cunha Group, South Atlantic Ocean., pp. 27-33 in Zootaxa 1072 on pages 28-30
format Text
author M. E. Anderson
D. L. Stein
H. W. Detrich
author_facet M. E. Anderson
D. L. Stein
H. W. Detrich
author_sort M. E. Anderson
title Synchiropus valdiviae
title_short Synchiropus valdiviae
title_full Synchiropus valdiviae
title_fullStr Synchiropus valdiviae
title_full_unstemmed Synchiropus valdiviae
title_sort synchiropus valdiviae
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2005
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265829
https://zenodo.org/record/6265829
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.900,140.900,-66.735,-66.735)
geographic Tristan
geographic_facet Tristan
genre South Atlantic Ocean
genre_facet South Atlantic Ocean
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6265829 2023-05-15T18:21:24+02:00 Synchiropus valdiviae M. E. Anderson D. L. Stein H. W. Detrich 2005 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265829 https://zenodo.org/record/6265829 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/41DDF31C84FABB9A145218519758A963 http://zoobank.org/394228F5-C326-482F-876B-58BF0C84CA19 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit http://publication.plazi.org/id/41DDF31C84FABB9A145218519758A963 http://zoobank.org/394228F5-C326-482F-876B-58BF0C84CA19 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265828 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 Callionymidae Synchiropus Synchiropus valdiviae article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2005 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265829 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6265828 2022-04-01T12:32:01Z Synchiropus valdiviae (Trunov, 1981) (Fig. 1) Presently there are two classifications of dragonets, variously at odds with one another (Fricke 1982, 2002; Nakabo 1982, 1983). Although Nakabo (op. cit.) and Nakabo and Hartel (1999) placed this species in Foetorepus Whitley, we follow Fricke (2002) in placing it in Synchiropus Gill. Two adult females and three juveniles of S. valdiviae were taken in the beam trawl at station 85 just north of Nightingale Island. Originally described from a single adult male from Walvis Ridge, a second male has been discovered, and both are from the same locality (Trunov, 1981; Fricke, 1985, but not a paratype as stated). Our specimens are identified on the basis of their agreement with the two males in several characters which separate the species from other Atlantic congeners (reviewed by Nakabo and Hartel, 1999): their coloration, bowed lateral line, counts and proportions, which separate the species from other Atlantic congeners. Counts and measurements (ranges of the two adult females first, followed in parentheses by juveniles): Vertebrae 7 + 13-14 (7 + 14); D I V, 8 (IV, 8 9); A 7 (7); P 22 (21-22); pelv. I, 5 (I, 5); C ii -iii + 10 + ii (ii -iii + 10 + i -ii); gill rakers 0 + 7 (0 + 7-8); branchiostegal rays 6 (6); pseudobranch filaments 12 (6-7). Following proportions as percent SL: body width 16.8-18.3 (16.1-16.7); body depth 15.3-15.8 (14.9-15.0); caudal peduncle depth 5.9-6.5 (5.7-5.9); predorsal length 30.8-32.1 (30.7-32.1); preanal length 53.9-54.4 (52.4-52.6); caudal fin length 28.6- 30.9 (30.0- 31.2); head length 27.5-27.8 (29.6-30.4); head depth 15.1-17.1 (15.1-16.7); eye diameter 11.3-11.9 (13.1-13.3); snout length 6.5-7.4 (6.3-6.7); upper jaw length 9.7-10.1 (10.2-10.4); interorbital width 2.4-2.5 (1.5-2.2); 1st dorsal spine length 15.4-15.6 (15.3-15.4); 2nd dorsal spine length 11.1-11.9 (12.2); 3rd dorsal spine length 10.0- 0.1 (8.9); 4th dorsal spine length 6.8- 7.0 (7.0-7.1); 1st dorsal ray length 18.1-19.0 (20.5-23.2); last dorsal ray length 18.6- 19.8 (17.8-18.0); 1st anal ray length 9.2-9.4 (10.8-12.0); last anal ray length 19.3-20.0 (20.1- 23.0); 1st to 2nd dorsal distance 6.0-6.2 (6.5-7.0); 1st dorsal base 7.1-7.3 (6.5-6.7); 2nd dorsal base 30.3- 30.5 (28.4-31.3); anal base 23.2-24.0 (20.0-21.6); pectoral base depth 8.6-9.1 (7.8-8.2); pectoral fin length 21.2-21.9 (15.8-19.0); pelvic fin length 27.4-27.9 (29.2-30.7). First dorsal spine not elongate, only very slightly so in juvenile male. Lateral line distinctly bowed on body, sharply descending to midline between third and fifth dorsal rays (Trunov, 1981, shows bow extending to last ray). Anal fin origin on vertical through fourth dorsal ray, not first as stated by Trunov, but illustrated by him under third. Preopercular spine with trifid tip in all. Body reddish with yellow variegations, first dorsal fin membrane dusky except in juvenile male which has a solid black membrane except proximally. Membrane of anal fin with yellowish distal streak. Membrane of second dorsal fin with indistinct yellowish areas. Material: SAIAB 74966 (2 females, 52.7-54.5 mm SL; male, 61.6 mm SL); sta. 85/BT 44; 37° 20.3'S, 12° 30.0'W; 2 m beam trawl; 188-201 m; 12:59-13:11 hrs; 7 July 2004.SAIAB 74969 (2 females, 106.5-116.8 mm SL); sta. 85/BT 45; 37° 19.2'S, 12° 29.9'W; 2 m beam trawl; 210- 223 m; 15:29-15:50 hrs; 7 July 2004. : Published as part of M. E. Anderson, D. L. Stein & H. W. Detrich, 2005, Additions to the ichthyofauna of the Tristan da Cunha Group, South Atlantic Ocean., pp. 27-33 in Zootaxa 1072 on pages 28-30 Text South Atlantic Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Tristan ENVELOPE(140.900,140.900,-66.735,-66.735)