Scarus

Mark W. Westneat, Ukkrit Satapoomin & John E. Randall, 2007, Scarus maculipinna, a new species of parrotfish (Perciformes, Scaridae) from the eastern Indian Ocean., Zootaxa 1628, pp. 59-68 : 59-60

publication ID

z01628p059

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:630C2F92-A845-4C30-9BEE-8285CBA92418

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6244643

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BD65C8DE-801A-8597-4584-DFC2D4C0B040

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Scarus
status

 

[[ Scarus View in CoL View at ENA   ZBK ]]

Ten genera of parrotfishes are recognized (Bellwood, 1994), of which Scarus   ZBK is the largest, with over 50 species, and the only one present in all tropical and subtropical oceans. The general morphology is similar for most species of Scarus   ZBK , and identification of the Indo-Pacific species of Scarus   ZBK can be difficult for preserved specimens that have lost their distinctive life color. Meristic data are of limited value in species identification. Parrotfishes normally have IX, 10 dorsal rays and III, 9 anal rays. The number of pectoral rays of the species of Scarus   ZBK vary from 13 to 16, and the count is strongly modal for each species, so it is often helpful. The usual lateral-line scale count of 17-18 + 4-6 is of no diagnostic value, but the number of predorsal scales and the number of rows of scales on the cheek are often useful characters. The gill rakers are small and variable in number within a species. Life colors remain the most important distinctive features in the classification of Scarus   ZBK , but sexual dichromatism and the different color of the juvenile stages (Bellwood 1989, Bellwood & Choat 1989) can complicate species identification.

Parrotfishes have extreme variation in color with growth and with sex change (Choat & Randall 1986; Bellwood & Choat 1989), and the juvenile and initial phase color patterns are often difficult to distinguish among species. This has led to a strong focus on the more colorful males as the basis for species descriptions. In the present paper, however, the initial phase coloration is distinctive, with three prominent dark spots on the dorsal, pectoral base, and anal fins, forming the etymological basis for the naming of this new parrotfish species. The authors collected this species independently on the coral reefs of Surin and the Similan Islands of Thailand and the Mentawai Islands, Sumatra.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Perciformes

Family

Scaridae

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