Ophichthus, Ahl, 1789
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4750.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A4901CAE-B053-4FE3-AECA-A7C1DF74B895 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3706323 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C23C59-FFF8-F92B-53F9-FD37FA73F79A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2020-03-10 14:05:57, last updated 2024-11-30 06:10:05) |
scientific name |
Ophichthus |
status |
|
Key to selected Indian Ocean species of Ophichthus View in CoL View at ENA
This key is based primarily on McCosker (in press). Many western Pacific species of Ophichthus co-occur with Indian Ocean congeners, however, they are excluded here unless they are also known from the Indian Ocean; a worldwide revision of this large genus is needed. As well, several species are currently assigned to Pisodonophis or to Ophichthus and their status will also require a revision of those genera. In this key we cautiously treat Pisodonophis hijala ( Hamilton 1822) as a species of Ophichthus , recognizing that it may well be a species of Pisodonophis , and is a possible synonym of P. cancrivorus ( Richardson 1848) (see Talwar & Jhingran (1991) and Kottelat (2013)). Mc- Cosker reported (in press) that “The status of this species remains uncertain, as the type specimens are lost. Recently collected specimens from Myanmar (two from the Irrawaddy River) fit Hamilton’s original description.”
1a Body with one row of pale spots along lateral line ( India, shallow freshwater, brackish and marine)................................................................................................... O. hijala ( Hamilton 1822) View in CoL
1b Body lacks a row of pale spots along lateral line............................................................. 2
2a Head and body pale, with dark saddles or with 2–3 rows of dark or ocellated spots; pectoral fins rounded, not elongate; jaw teeth uniserial............................................................................................ 3
2b Head and body coloration uniform, may be darker dorsally, but without spots or saddles; pectoral fins either rounded or attenuate and elongate; jaw teeth in one to three rows............................................................. 7
3a Head and body with numerous dark or ocellated spots, not appearing as saddles................................... 4
3b Body lacks spots, but head variously with spots and saddles.................................................... 5
4a Head and body with numerous ocellated spots, those on body in 2–3 regular, alternating rows of spots separated by wide pale interspaces (East Africa to Marquesas Islands).................................... O. polyophthalmus Bleeker 1864 View in CoL
4b Head and body with numerous dark spots, those on body in 2 irregular rows of large and small spots, largest spots about equal in size to interspaces (Red Sea and South Africa to Japan).......................... O. erabo View in CoL ( Jordan & Snyder 1901)
5a Body with 18–27 prominent dark saddles or bars, including a conspicuous wide saddle above gill opening, anterior head with golden to orange spots (East Africa to the Society Islands)................................ O. bonaparti ( Kaup 1856) View in CoL
5b Color not as described above........................................................................... .. 6
6a Head with an obvious broad brown or black saddle and two pale bands; trunk and tail uniformly brown ( Myanmar to the Society Islands)...................................................................... O. cephalozona Bleeker 1864 View in CoL
6b Dorsal surface of head and gill basket brownish black; dorsal surface of trunk and tail overlain with brown irregular blotches and saddles, ventral surface distinctly pale (India and Myanmar to Japan and Australia).................................................................................................. O. lithinus View in CoL ( Jordan & Richardson 1908)
7a Body elongate to extremely elongate, its depth behind gill openings> 40 in TL..................................... 8
7b Body stout to moderately elongate, its depth behind gill openings <40 in TL.................................... .. 12
8a Dorsal-fin origin above or slightly behind pectoral-fin tip; tail length 1.4–1.6 in TL; teeth uniserial; vertebrae>220 ( India to Taiwan)..................................................................... .. O. macrochir ( Bleeker 1852) View in CoL
8b Dorsal-fin origin distinctly behind pectoral-fin tip; tail length 1.6–1.8 in TL; teeth biserial or triserial; vertebrae <220...... 9
9a Body very elongate, depth at gill openings 53–90 in TL; vertebrae 206–214...................................... 10
9b Body moderately elongate, depth at gill openings 43–53 in TL; vertebrae 156–186................................ 11
10a Head length 6.5 in trunk length; maxillary teeth in 3 rows; vertebrae 214 ( India)............. O. microcephalus Day 1878
10b Head length 5.5–6.1 in trunk length; maxillary teeth in 2 rows anteriorly, in one row posteriorly; vertebrae 206–214 ( India)............................................................................ O. chilkensis Chaudhuri 1916 View in CoL *
11a Dorsal-fin origin half a head length (1.5 pectoral-fin lengths) behind level of gill opening; teeth biserial anteriorly on lower jaw; vertebrae 174–186 (western Indian Ocean)........................................... O. marginatus ( Peters 1855) View in CoL
11b Dorsal-fin origin more than a head length (3 pectoral-fin lengths) behind level of gill opening; teeth uniserial anteriorly on lower jaw, becoming biserial posteriorly; vertebrae 156–158 ( India)............................................................................................... O. johnmccoskeri Mohapatra, Ray, Mohanty & Mishra 2018
12a Head short, head length 14.5–16 in TL ( South Africa to Namibia)......................... ... O. serpentinus Seale 1917 View in CoL
12b Head moderately large, head length <12 in TL............................................................. 13
13a Dorsal-fin origin above or slightly in front of gill openings; dorsal fin greatly elevated; anterior part of dorsal fin, median fin margins and pectoral fins black (southern Taiwan to the Society Islands, and possibly from the Indian Ocean)........................................................................................... O. altipennis ( Kaup 1856) View in CoL
13b Dorsal-fin origin above or behind pectoral-fin tips; dorsal fin low or only slightly elevated; pectoral fins and median fins (except near tail tip in some species) of larger specimens pale.................................................... 14
14a Dorsal-fin origin behind pectoral-fin tip by more than 3 pectoral-fin lengths..................................... 15
14b Dorsal-fin origin varying from above pectoral fin to behind pectoral-fin tip by less than 2 pectoral-fin lengths........... 17
15a Dorsal-fin origin two head lengths behind level of gill openings; tail length 2.0 in TL; body depth 23 in TL; vertebrae 153 ( Myanmar, depth 460 m)............................................... O. naga McCosker & Psomadakis 2018
15b Dorsal-fin origin about a head length behind level of gill openings; tail length 1.7–1.8 in TL; body depth 27–38 in TL; vertebrae 167–178........................................................................................... 16
16a Head length 11.0– 12.6 in TL; 3 preopercular pores; pectoral fins rounded; median fins pale ( Seychelles, depth 600 m).................................................................................... O. hirritus McCosker 2010 View in CoL
16b Head length 8.9–9.8 in TL; 2 preopercular pores; pectoral fins wedge-shaped; median fins pale, anal fin dark basally ( Madagascar, New Caledonia, and Vanuatu, depth 355–580 m)........................... O. brachynotopterus Karrer 1983 View in CoL
17a Teeth biserial in upper jaw and biserial or partly biserial in lower jaw........................................... 18
17b Teeth uniserial in jaws................................................................................ 22
18a Dorsal-fin origin behind pectoral-fin tip by about 1.5 pectoral-fin length; head moderately large, the length 7.1–7.7 in TL; teeth in lower jaw uniserial anteriorly, becoming biserial posteriorly and ending as triserial (Andaman Sea, depth 314–363 m)................................................ O. mccoskeri Sumod, Hibino, Manjabrayakath & Sanjeevan 2019
18b Dorsal-fin origin above pectoral fin; head moderate, the length 8.4–11.0 in TL; teeth in lower jaw entirely biserial or biserial anteriorly........................................................................................... 19
19a Two minute barbels present on upper lip; vomerine and lower jaw teeth in two rows anteriorly; dark gray-brown, paler ventrally, pectoral and median fins black ( Myanmar, depth 103 m).................... O. nansen McCosker & Psomadakis 2018
19b No barbels on upper lip; vomerine teeth in a single row, lower jaw teeth entirely in two rows; body and fins mostly pale... 20
20a Head length ~ 8.4 in TL; median fins pale posteriorly; 3 preopercular pores; pectoral fins rounded; vertebrae 125 (Red Sea, depth 300 m)................................................................ O. echeloides ( D’Ancona 1928) View in CoL
20b Head length 9.9–11.0 in TL; 2 preopercular pores; pectoral fins attenuate (slender); vertebrae 139–189................ 21
21a Tail length 1.6–1.7 in TL; eyes moderate in size, 6.9–8.7 in head length; anal fin pale overall; vertebrae 139–147 ( Maldives and New Caledonia, depth 435–500 m)................................................... O. genie McCosker 1999 View in CoL
21b Tail length 1.7–1.8 in TL; eyes large, 5.4–6.6 in head length; anal fin mostly pale, but becoming black near tail tip; vertebrae 166–189 ( Seychelles to Marquesas Islands, depth 300–423 m)............................. O. tomioi McCosker 2010 View in CoL
22a Head large, its length 6.7–7.1 in TL; vertebrae 130–132 (Gulf of Aden, depth 258–400 m). O. ishiyamorum McCosker 2010 View in CoL
22b Head length 8.4–11.0 in TL; vertebrae 136–156........................................................... .. 23
23a Tail length slightly shorter than head and trunk, its length 2.2 in TL; vomerine teeth uniserial (Red Sea, depth 35–63 m).................................................................. O. olivaceus McCosker & Bogorodsky sp. nov.
23b Tail length longer than head and trunk, its length 1.6–1.9 in TL; vomerine teeth generally biserial.................... 24
24a Vertebrae 150–161; head coloration uniform ( India, Taiwan, Japan)......... O. machidai McCosker, Ide & Endo 2012 **
24b Vertebrae 136–141; snout and lower jaw blackish (East Africa to the Philippines)................................................................................................... O. apicalis View in CoL (Anonymous [Bennett] 1830)***
Bleeker, P. (1852) Bijdrage tot de kennis der Muraenoiden en Symbranchoiden van den Indischen Archipel. Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen, 25 (5), 1 - 62.
Bleeker, P. (1864) Atlas ichthyologique des Indes Orientales Neerlandaises, publie sous les auspices du Gouvernement colonial neerlandaises. Tome IV. Murenes, Synbranches, Leptocephales. Vol. 4. Frederic Muller, Amsterdam, 132 pp.
Chaudhuri, B. L. (1916). Fauna of the Chilka Lake. Fish. Part II. Memoirs of the Indian Museum, 5 (5), 441 - 458.
D'Ancona, U. (1928) Murenoidi (Apodes) del Mar Rosso e del Golfo di Aden. Materiali raccolti dal Prof. Luigi Sanzo nella Campagna della R. N. Ammiraglio Magnaghi 1923 - 24. Memoria, Reale Comitato Talassografico Italiano, 146, 1 - 146.
Day, F. (1878) The fishes of India; being a natural history of the fishes known to inhabit the seas and fresh waters of India, Burma, and Ceylon. Part 4. B. Quaritch, London, 227 pp. [pp. 553 - 779] https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 55567
Hamilton, F. (1822) An account of the fishes found in the river Ganges and its branches. Printed for A. Constable and company, Edinburgh & London, 405 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 59540
Jordan, D. S. & Snyder, J. O. (1901) A review of the apodal fishes or eels of Japan, with descriptions of nineteen new species. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 23 (1239), 837 - 890. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.23 - 1239.837
Jordan, D. S. &. Richardson, R. E. (1908) Fishes from islands of the Philippine Archipelago. Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries, 27 (640), 233 - 287. [for 1907]
Karrer, C. (1983) Anguilliformes du Canal de Mozambique (Pisces, Teleostei). Faune Tropicale, 23, 1 - 116. [for 1982]
Kaup, J. J. (1856) Uebersicht der Aale. Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, 22 (1), 41 - 77. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 11240
Kottelat, M. (2013) The fishes of the inland waters of southeast Asia: a catalogue and core bibliography of the fishes known to occur in freshwaters, mangroves and estuaries. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, Supplement 27, 1 - 663.
McCosker, J. E. (1999) Pisces Anguilliformes: deepwater snake eels (Ophichthidae) from the New Caledonia region, southwest Pacific Ocean. Memoires du Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, New Series, Serie A, Zoologie, 180, 571 - 588.
McCosker, J. E. (2010) Deepwater Indo-Pacific species of the snake-eel genus Ophichthus (Anguilliformes: Ophichthidae), with the description of nine new species. Zootaxa, 2505 (1), 1 - 39. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 2505.1.1
McCosker, J. E., Ide, S. & Endo, H. (2012). Three new species of ophichthid eels (Anguilliformes: Ophichthidae) from Japan. Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science, Series A, Supplement 6, 1 - 16.
McCosker, J. E. & Psomadakis, P. N. (2018) Snake eels of the genus Ophichthus (Anguilliformes) from Myanmar (Indian Ocean) with the description of two new species. Zootaxa, 4526 (1), 71 - 83. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4526.1.5
Mohapatra, A., Ray, D., Mohanty, S. R. & Mishra, S. S. (2018) Ophichthus johnmccoskeri sp. nov. (Anguilliformes: Ophichthidae): a new snake eel from Indian waters, Bay of Bengal. Zootaxa, 4462 (2), 251 - 256. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4462.2.7
Peters, W. (1855) Ubersicht der in Mossambique beobachteten Seefische. Bericht uber die zur Bekanntmachung geeigneten Verhandlungen der Koniglichen Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, 1855, 428 - 466.
Richardson, J. (1848) Ichthyology of the voyage of H. M. S. Erebus & Terror, under the command of Captain Sir James Clark Ross, R. N., F. R. S. In: Richardson, J. & Gray, J. E. (Eds.), The zoology of the voyage of H. M. S. Erebus & Terror, under the command of Captain Sir J. C. Ross, R. N., F. R. S., during the years 1839 to 1843. Vol. 2. E. W. Janson, London, pp. 75 - 139.
Seale, A. (1917) New species of apodal fishes. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 61 (4), 79 - 94.
Sumod, K. S., Hibino, Y., Manjabrayakath, H. & Sanjeevan, V. N. (2019) Description of a new species of deep-water snake eel, Ophichthus mccoskeri (Ophichthidae: Ophichthinae) from Andaman Sea, India. Zootaxa, 4686 (1), 112 - 118. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4686.1.5
Talwar, P. K. & Jhingran, A. G. (1991) Inland fishes of India and adjacent countries. Oxford & IBH Publishing Co., New Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, 1158 pp.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
1 (by plazi, 2020-03-10 14:05:57)
2 (by ExternalLinkService, 2020-03-10 14:17:50)
3 (by ExternalLinkService, 2020-03-10 22:54:22)
4 (by angel, 2020-03-12 14:43:54)
5 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-10-20 04:13:54)
6 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-10-20 09:33:33)
7 (by plazi, 2023-10-31 04:30:52)