Epigonus Rafinesque, 1810

Okamoto, Makoto & Gon, Ofer, 2018, A review of the deepwater cardinalfish genus Epigonus (Perciformes: Epigonidae) of the Western Indian Ocean, with description of two new species, Zootaxa 4382 (2), pp. 261-291 : 262

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4382.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8E248E6F-FDA5-4829-9DD7-4CC0EFDB08B6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5998231

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A2BF38-6E6C-4068-FF18-5E2C158C9BE5

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Epigonus Rafinesque, 1810
status

 

Genus Epigonus Rafinesque, 1810 View in CoL View at ENA

Diagnosis (based on Western Indian Ocean species). A genus of the family Epigonidae with the following combination of characters: body elongate, body depth 16–27% SL; first dorsal-fin spines 7–8 (the 8th may present as an isolated spine between first dorsal and second dorsal fins); second dorsal-fin with a single spine and soft rays 9–11; anal fin with 2 spines and 8–9 soft rays; pectoral-fin rays 15–23; gill rakers 18–36; lateral-line scales 33–51; pyloric caeca 5–35; infraorbital bones 8, smooth; branchiostegal rays 7; edges of opercular bones smooth to weakly serrated; lateral line scales on caudal peduncle not forming a keel; no antrorse teeth in upper jaw; procurrent rays soft.

Remarks. The epigonid genera, Epigonus , Brephostoma Alcock, 1889 , Florenciella Mead & De Falla, 1965 , Rosenblattia Mead & De Falla, 1965 and Sphyraenops Poey, 1861 , are distributed in the Western Indian Ocean and closely related to each other. Epigonus differs from Brephostoma in having 7–8 first dorsal-fin spines and 2 anal-fin spines (vs. 6 first dorsal fin spines and one anal fin spine in Brephostoma ). Also, Epigonus differs from Florenciella and Rosenblattia in having 9–11 soft rays in the second dorsal fin (vs. 7–8 in the latter two genera), a shallower body depth [16–27 % SL vs. 25–42 % SL from Mead & De Falla (1965)], soft procurrent rays (vs. stiff), and in lacking antrorse teeth on the upper jaw (vs. present on the both jaws). Epigonus can be distinguished from Sphyraenops by having none or a single pungent opercular spine (vs. 3 opercular spines in Sphyraenops ), 2 spines and 8–9 soft rays on the anal fin (vs. 3 spines and 7 soft rays on the anal fin), and 7 branchiostegal rays (vs. 6 branchiostegal rays). The genus Epigonus of the Western Indian Ocean are represented by 14 species, including two new species here described ( Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 ).

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF