Luciogobius platycephalus, Shiogaki & Dotsu, 1976
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5361.3.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AFEFD8C9-ABC1-4793-8B83-49FB7B526389 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10166560 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EC5C3E-1C46-0C71-FF7B-FB60FAEDFED0 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2023-11-16 19:37:54, last updated 2024-11-27 18:26:16) |
scientific name |
Luciogobius platycephalus |
status |
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The Luciogobius platycephalus View in CoL complex sensu Shibukawa et al. (2019)
Morphological characters. Species of the Luciogobius platycephalus complex possess the following combination of characters: second vertebrae with pleural ribs (sometimes one side absent); anus to anal-fin origin (AAA) longer than half body depth at anus to anal-fin origin; dorsal-fin origin just above or behind anterior 1/3 part of anal-fin base; total dorsal-fin rays usually 10–12; pectoral fin with 2–7 free uppermost rays; posterior margin of pectoral-fin membrane between each fin ray relatively concave; anteriormost pterygiophore of anal fin inserted between second to fourth haemal spine.
Species included in the Luciogobius platycephalus complex: Luciogobius griseus n. sp., Luciogobius platycephalus Shiogaki & Dotsu, 1976 , Luciogobius sp. 7 sensu Shibukawa et al. (2019).
Remarks. Members of the L. platycephalus complex can be distinguished from other species complexes by the presence of pleural ribs on the second vertebra, except the L. grandis complex sensu Shibukawa et al. (2019) ( Shibukawa et al., 2019; this study). The latter complex differs from the L. platycephalus complex by having 12–18 (usually more than 13) dorsal-fin rays, AAA shorter than half the body depth at the anus to anal-fin origin [except for Luciogobius sp. 6 sensu Shibukawa et al. (2019)], dorsal-fin origin just vertical through or slightly posterior to anal-fin origin (except for Luciogobius sp. 6 ), and the anteriormost anal-fin pterygiophore inserted between the first and second haemal spines [sometimes inserted between the second and third haemal spines in Luciogobius sp. 4 sensu Maeda et al. (2008)] ( Shibukawa et al., 2019; Koreeda & Motomura, 2021). Sexual dimorphism of the head is apparent in the L. platycephalus complex (see L. griseus n. sp.).
Shibukawa et al. (2019) listed differences in fresh or live coloration between the L. grandis and L. platycephalus complexes: dark green to dark gray in the former vs. bright yellow to orange in the latter. However, the fresh or live coloration of L. griseus n. sp. and Luciogobius sp. 7 are also dark green or dark yellow (see Shibukawa et al., 2019: figs. 20–21; this study). Juveniles and adults of L. platycephalus are usually bright yellow to green in life, although larger adults often have relatively darker coloration (this study). In addition, the population of L. platycephalus in northwestern Kagoshima Bay, Kyushu, Japan is relatively darker than those in other sites ( Koreeda et al., 2020). Possibly, the darker bodied specimen reported by Koreeda et al. (2020: fig. 3C, F) was an axanthic individual.
Koreeda, R., Yamashita, R., Furuhashi, R., Saito, H. & Motomura, H. (2020) First records of Luciogobius sp. 1 (sensu Shibukawa et al. 2019), L. platycephalus, and L. elongatus from Kagoshima Bay, southern Kyushu, Japan. Nature of Kagoshima, 46, 357 - 366. [In Japanese]
Koreeda, R. & Motomura, H. (2021) Records of seven temperate and subtropical species of Luciogobius from Shimokoshikishima island, Koshiki Islands, East China Sea, Japan, and the first record of the possible hybrid individuals for Luciogobius. Ichthy, Natural History of Fishes of Japan, 11, 27 - 52. [In Japanese] https: // doi. org / 10.34583 / ichthy. 11.0 _ 27
Maeda, K., Yamasaki, N., Kondo, M. & Tachihara, K. (2008) Occurrence and morphology of larvae and juveniles of six Luciogobius species from Aritsu Beach, Okinawa Island. Ichthyological Research, 55, 162 - 174. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / s 10228 - 007 - 0018 - x
Shibukawa, K., Aizawa, M., Suzuki, T., Kanagawa, N. & Muto, F. (2019) Preliminary review of earthworm gobies of the genus Luciogobius (Gobiiformes, Oxudercidae) from Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. Bulletin of the Museum of Natural and Environmental History, Shizuoka, 12, 29 - 96. [In Japanese]
Shiogaki, M. & Dotsu, Y. (1976) Two new species of the genus Luciogobius (family Gobiidae) from Japan. Japanese Journal of Ichthyology, 23 (3), 125 - 129. [https: // www. jstage. jst. go. jp / article / jji 1950 / 23 / 3 / 23 _ 3 _ 125 / _ pdf / - char / ja]
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