Diplecogaster Fraser-Brunner 1938
Diplecogaster Fraser-Brunner 1938: 415 (type species: Cyclopterus bimaculatus Bonnaterre 1788 by original designation).
Diagnosis
Three and one half gills; gill membranes attached to the isthmus; disc double; dorsal and anal fins normal with strong rays; disc length 3.2 – 5.2 in SL; no spine in subopercular area; 4 – 9 dorsal-fin rays; 3 – 8 anal-fin rays; 20 – 26 pectoral-fin rays; premaxillaries short; maxillaries well forward in position; head lateral-line system with two pores in the lacrymal canal.
Remarks
A total of six valid species is known in this genus; a checklist of the species and an
identification key are presented below.
Within the genus Diplecogaster, two species groups can be distinguished:
– Diplecogaster-bimaculata group: characterised by a moderate number of 4 – 8 rays in the dorsal fin and 3 – 7 in the anal fin (D.- ctenocrypta group: 9 rays in the dorsal fin, 8 rays in the anal fin), and the position of the anus which is situated in the middle between disc and anal-fin origin (D.- ctenocrypta group: situated closer to the analfin origin than to the end of the disc).
Species. D. bimaculata, D. euxinica, D. megalops, D. pectoralis .
Distribution. Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea, eastern Atlantic Ocean, South Africa.
– Diplecogaster-ctenocrypta group (reviewed in the present paper): characterised by a high number of 9 rays in the dorsal fin and 8 in the anal fin (D.- bimaculata group: 4 – 8 rays in the dorsal fin, 3 – 7 rays in the anal fin), and the position of the anus which is situated closer to the anal-fin origin than to the end of the disc (D.- bimaculata group: situated in the middle between disc and anal-fin origin). The species of the group are further distinguished from the Diplecogaster bimaculata, D. euxinica and D. pectoralis in having 14 – 15 caudalfin rays (18 – 21 in D. bimaculata, D. euxinica and D. pectoralis), and lacking lateral papillae in disc region A (many lateral papillae present in D. bimaculata, D. euxinica and D. pectoralis), and from D. megalops in 13 – 16 rakers on third gill arch (7 – 9 rakers in D. megalops).
Species. D. ctenocrypta, D. tonstricula n. sp.
Distribution. Eastern Atlantic Ocean.
Checklist of the species of Diplecogaster
Diplecogaster bimaculata (Bonnaterre [ex Pennant] 1788)
Cyclopterus bimaculatus Bonnaterre [ex Pennant] 1788: 29, pl, 86, figure 355 (seas of England; no types known)
Lepadogaster ocellatus Risso 1810: 74 ( Villefranche-sur-Mer, France; no types known). Lepadogaster reticulatus Risso 1810: 77 ( Nice, France; no types known) .
Lepadogaster mirbeli Risso 1820: 249 ( Nice, France; no types known).
Lepadogaster desfontanii Risso 1827: 275, pl. 14, figure 39 ( Nice, France; syntypes: MZUF 584-0093, 10 specimens) .
Lepadogaster latirostris Costa 1840: Lepadogaster p. 4 ( Naples, Italy; no types known) . Lepadogaster urifasciatus Costa 1840: Lepadogaster p. 9 ( Gulf of Salerno, Italy; no types known) .
Lepadogaster norvegicus Düben 1845: 112 (Norway; no types known).
Lepadogaster listellus Nardo [ex Chiereghini] 1847: col. 113 (Italy; no types known) .
Lepadogaster raninus Nardo [ex Chiereghini] 1847: col. 113 (Italy; no types known) .
Lepidogaster couchii Saville-Kent 1883: 55 – 56 ( Devonshire and Cornwall, UK; no types known).
Distribution: Mediterranean Sea, north-eastern Atlantic: Norway and Faroes south to Gibraltar.
Diplecogaster ctenocrypta Briggs 1955
Diplecogaster ctenocrypta Briggs 1955: 32, figure 85 ( Gran Canaria, Canary Islands; holotype: ZMUC P9037).
Distribution: Canary Islands.
Diplecogaster euxinica Murgoci 1964
Diplecogaster bimaculata euxinica Murgoci 1964: 229, figure 1 (Romania, Black Sea; holotype: MGAB 55).
Distribution. Black Sea.
Diplecogaster melagops Briggs 1955
Diplecogaster megalops Briggs 1955: 31, figure 84 (off Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; holotype: ZMUC P9031).
Distribution: South Africa.
Diplecogaster pectoralis Briggs 1955
Diplecogaster bimaculata pectoralis Briggs 1955: 30, figure 83 ( Gran Canaria, Canary Islands; holotype: ZMUC P9034).
Distribution: Canary Islands, Madeira, Azores, Cape Verde Islands.
Diplecogaster tonstricula new species (present paper)
Distribution: Canary Islands, Senegal.
Key to the species of the genus Diplecogaster
1. Dorsal-fin rays 4 – 8; anal-fin rays 3 – 7 ............................................................................................. 2
- Dorsal-fin rays 9; anal-fin rays 8 ......................................................................................................... 5
2. Eye large, eye diameter 0.5 – 0.6 in bony interorbital, 2.3 – 3.6 (mean 3.25) in head length; no ocelli on sides of body; South Africa .............. .............. Diplecogaster megalops
- Eye relatively small, eye diameter 0.7 – 1.2 in bony interorbital, 3.2 – 4.9 (mean 4.2) in head length; at least one ocellus on side of body below pectoral fin; eastern Atlantic, Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea ................................................................................................................. 3
3. Snout length 3.7 – 7.7 in head length; upper attachment of axial, dermal flap opposite pectoral-fin rays 10 – 19 (mean 18); principal caudal rays 12 – 14 .................................................................................................................... Diplecogaster euxinica
- Snout length 3.3 – 3.8 in head length; upper attachment of axial, dermal flap opposite pectoral-fin rays 10 – 13 (mean 12); principal caudal rays 9 – 12 ............................................... 4
4. Pectoral-fin rays 21 – 24; caudal – peduncle depth 1.2 – 1.5 (mean 1.3); eye diameter 3.7 – 4.9 (mean 4.1) in head length...................................... ...................................... Diplecogaster bimaculata
- Pectoral-fin rays 25 – 26; caudal – peduncle depth 1.0 – 1.2 (mean 1.1); eye diameter 3.2 – 3.9 (mean 3.6) in head length................................................................................ Diplecogaster pectoralis
5. Pelvic disc with lateral papillae in region A; disc region B with 5 rows of papillae; mandibular canal with 1 pore; principal caudal-fin rays 16; interorbital distance 5.4 in head length; distance between disc and anus 19% of SL ........................ Diplecogaster ctenocrypta
- Pelvic disc without lateral papillae in region A; disc region B with 2 rows of weak papillae; mandibular pores missing; principal caudal-fin rays 14 – 15; interorbital distance 4.1 – 4.6 in head length; distance between disc and anus 14 – 17% of SL ................................................................................................... Diplecogaster tonstricula n. sp.