Gigantactinidae

GIGANTACTINIDAE Females of the Gigantactinidae are distinguished by having an elongate, laterally compressed body; a long slender illicium, with highly variable lengths (less than SL to nearly five times SL) emerging from the anteriormost tip of the snout; length of head less than 35% SL; mouth near...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mincarone, Michael Maia, Afonso, Gabriel Vinícius Felix, Di Dario, Fabio, Eduardo, Leandro Nolé, Frédou, Thierry, Lucena-Frédou, Flávia, Bertrand, Arnaud, Pietsch, Theodore Wells
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11050484
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/5D77BB3E0F3CFFF5FC8AF94EDF32FCDA
Description
Summary:GIGANTACTINIDAE Females of the Gigantactinidae are distinguished by having an elongate, laterally compressed body; a long slender illicium, with highly variable lengths (less than SL to nearly five times SL) emerging from the anteriormost tip of the snout; length of head less than 35% SL; mouth nearly horizontal, upper jaw extending slightly beyond lower jaw; epibranchial and ceratobranchial teeth absent; caudal peduncle unusually long and slender, more than 20% SL; 3–10 dorsal-fin rays, 3–8 anal-fin rays; caudal fin usually incised posteriorly, 9 caudal-fin rays, usually highly elongate. Males are probably free living, never parasitic (Pietsch, 2009). In addition to the species recorded here, two species of the family have been previously reported in Brazilian waters: Gigantactis longicirra Waterman, 1939 and G. vanhoeffeni Brauer, 1902. Gigantactis longicirra is known from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. In the Atlantic, it occurs in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, Canada, south along the New England slope to the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, off Venezuela, and in the Gulf of Guinea. A single specimen was also collected off Espírito Santo State, Brazil (MNRJ 30700, 19º48’29”S 39º02’21”W; Pietsch, 2009). Gigantactis vanhoeffeni is known from the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans, with records in the Atlantic ranging from off western Greenland to the South Atlantic, including the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, Cape Verde Islands, Gulf of Guinea, and off South Africa (Bertelsen et al ., 1981; Sutton et al ., 2008; Pietsch, 2009; Porteiro et al ., 2017). In Brazil, G. vanhoeffeni was recorded based on specimens collected off Saint Peter and Saint Paul Archipelago (MCZ 61049, 0º34’N 30º43’W) and off Espírito Santo State (MNRJ 30708, 21º12’18”S 40º00’53”W; Costa et al ., 2007; Pietsch, 2009; Mincarone et al ., 2017; Melo et al ., 2020: 188, as “ verhoeffeni ”) (Fig. 5). Two additional records of Gigantactis sp. in Brazilian waters are also known, one consisting of a female collected off Bahia State (MNRJ 30699, ...