Eumicrotremus awae

Lee, Soo Jeong, Kim, Jin-Koo, Kai, Yoshiaki, Ikeguchi, Shin’Ichiro & Nakabo, Tetsuji, 2017, Taxonomic review of dwarf species of Eumicrotremus (Actinopterygii: Cottoidei: Cyclopteridae) with descriptions of two new species from the western North Pacific, Zootaxa 4282 (2), pp. 337-349 : 339-341

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4282.2.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F7A67B55-5541-436C-BA0B-7ECA581B3791

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6007201

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0534CF70-FF97-FFA4-FF34-FF704253DB2E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eumicrotremus awae
status

 

Eumicrotremus awae ( Jordan and Snyder, 1902)

[Japanese name: Dango-uo]

( Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 A, B, 2A, 3A; Table 1)

Lethotremus awae View in CoL Jordan & Snyder, 1902: 344 (type locality: Kominato, Awa, mouth of Tokyo Bay); Ueno, 1970:129 (Chiba, Kanagawa, and Shizuoka); Kido, 1984: 337, pl. 303-I, in part (Shizuoka to Chiba); Nakabo, 1993: 577, in part (Shizuoka to Chiba); Nakabo, 2000: 622, in part (Shizuoka to Chiba); Nakabo, 2002: 662, in part (Pacific coast of Honshu Is.); Mecklenburg & Sheiko, 2003: 11, listed, in part (Pacific coast of Honshu Is.); Nakabo & Kai, 2013: 1202, in part (Pacific coast of Honshu Is.).

Cyclopsis awae: Lindberg & Legeza, 1955: 442 (Awa, mouth of Tokyo Bay).

Materials examined. 33 specimens. CAS-SU 6971 View Materials (1 specimen, presumed holotype of Lethotremus awae , examined from photo and radiograph), near river mouth at Kominato, former Awa Province, Bay of Tokyo, coll. by Jordan and Snyder ; CAS-SU 6970 View Materials (1, presumed paratype of L. awae , examined from photo and radiograph), Bay of Tokyo, coll. by Jordan and Snyder ; FAKU 102873 View Materials (1), 18.9 mm SL, Heta , Shizuoka ; FAKU 134183 View Materials * (1), 134725* (1), 135824 (1), PKU 55991* (mtDNA only, 1), 15.3–24.4 mm SL, Kanagawa (locality details unknown) ; FAKU 135362 View Materials * (1, genetic analysis only), FRLM 2425 View Materials (1), 2426 (1), 3361 (1), 4009 (1), 40382 (1), 40944* (1), 9.3–22.9 mm SL, Shima , Mie ; KPM-NI 11874–11876 About KPM-NI (3), 11886 (1), 18.8–21.5 mm SL, Jyogajima , Kanagawa ; KPM-NI 13695 About KPM-NI (1), 13696 (1), 14925 (4), 17585 (3), 14.3–22.1 mm SL, Koajiro, Misaki , Kanagawa ; KPM-NI 15126 About KPM-NI (1), 13.3 mm SL; Moroiso , Kanagawa ; KPM-NI 16004 About KPM-NI (1), 8.6 mm SL, Yokosuka , Kanagawa ; KPM-NI 31619 About KPM-NI (1), 22.2 mm SL, Manazuru , Kanagawa ; KPM-NI 34207 About KPM-NI (1), 34223 (1), 13.7–17.1 mm SL, Ito , Shizuoka .

Diagnosis. A species of Eumicrotremus with the following combination of characters: no spiny tubercles or fleshy papillae on body; anterior three mandibular pores each with a barbel-like tube; interorbital and suborbital pores usually absent; opercular flap rounded; many papillae present on ventral disk; caudal-fin relatively short, 21.0–30.5% of SL.

Description. Counts and proportional measurements are shown in Table 1. Body globose, completely naked, lacking spiny tubercles or fleshy papillae; caudal peduncle compressed. Interorbital space broad, slightly concave. Eye small, lower margin above level of snout. Two nostrils, anterior with relatively long tube, posterior with short tube. Mouth terminal, wide, slightly oblique, posterior margin of maxilla reaching to level with anterior margin of orbit (or center of orbit). Jaws with small conical teeth, arranged in three or four diagonal rows. Teeth on vomer and palatine absent. Gill slit short, its length much shorter than orbit diameter, located below origin of first dorsal fin and not reaching upper pectoral origin. Opercular flap small, rounded, directed posterodorsally.

Cephalic pores small ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A). Nasal canal with two pores, one anterior to nostrils and another just behind anterior nostril; interorbital canal without pores (rarely a single interorbital pore, one of four specimens of KPM-NI 14925, one of three specimens of KPM-NI 17585); postorbital canal usually with postbranchial pore, rarely supraorbital pore present anteriorly (one of four specimens of KPM-NI 14925, one of three specimens of KPM-NI 17585, KPM-NI 3 4223); branch from supraorbital canal sometimes with two small pores; infraorbital canal with two or three suborbital pores; operculomandibular canal with four mandibular pores along lower jaw, posterior three each with a barbel-like tube, anteriormost pore below tip of mandibular, second below posterior part of lower jaw, third below center of orbit, fourth at posteroventral margin of preopercle with relatively long tube. Free neuromasts reduced or indiscernable, originating from above gill slit and extending downward to level at midbody, posteriorly extending to caudal portion.

Two dorsal fins; first dorsal fin without spiny tubercles, somewhat higher in mature males than in females and immature specimens; second dorsal fin located slightly anterior to opposite anal fin, length and height almost equal, without spiny tubercles. Second dorsal and anal fins not reaching caudal fin base when depressed. Caudal fin short, rounded, its length usually shorter than pelvic disc length. Pectoral fins short, posterior tips usually not reaching level of posterior margin of pelvic disk; pectoral-fin base long, lowermost point below posterior margin of orbit. Pelvic disc large, round, slightly constricted anteriorly, with many papillae ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 A). Anus approximately midway between posterior margin of pelvic disc and anterior origin of anal fin.

Color when fresh ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 A, B). Coloration [from observations on FAKU 134725, 135824; KPM-NI 11874, 11875, 11876, 11886 (digital images of the latter four specimens deposited as KPM-NR 5 5941–55944 in the photographic database of KPM: http://fishpix.kahaku.go.jp/fishimage/index.html)]. Body and head coloration variable—dark brownish overall with dark brown dots, dark reddish or yellowish with irregular white markings on head, extending to base of pectoral fin, and anteriorly on bases of second dorsal and anal fins. Eye margin red or dark brown. First dorsal fin dark brown, reddish or yellowish; second dorsal, anal, caudal and pectoral fins translucent, pale reddish or yellowish. Ventral disc white, margined with yellow or dark reddish.

Color in preservative. In 70% ethanol, body and head dark, sometimes with black dots or pale irregular markings. First dorsal fin dark; second dorsal, anal, caudal and pectoral fins translucent. Ventral disc white, with dark margin.

Distribution. Specimen records indicated a distribution along the Pacific coast of Honshu Is., from Chiba westward to Mie ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ).

Remarks. Eumicrotremus awae was originally described by Jordan and Snyder (1902) in the genus Lethotremus , on the basis of the holotype, CAS-SU 6539 View Materials and other specimens (no catalog numbers given in the original description). According to Mecklenburg and Sheiko (2003), CAS-SU 6539 View Materials is now missing and CAS-SU 6971 View Materials may, in fact, be the missing holotype (suggested by notes in the collection database). Earlier, Böhlke (1953) had listed CAS-SU 6971 View Materials and 6970 as holotype and paratype of E. awae , respectively. Although the type status of CAS-SU 6971 View Materials remains unclear, both CAS-SU 6971 View Materials and 6970 had many ventral disk papillae, and lacked interorbital and supraorbital pores, being consistent with E. awae (see Jordan and Snyder, 1902). In addition, the type specimens, including that initially listed as CAS-SU 6539 View Materials in the original description, were all collected from Bay of Tokyo, being only included in the established distributional range of E. awae .

The description of Cyclopsis awae given by Lindberg & Legeza (1955) was partly based on Jordan & Snyder (1902), but suggested also that some of the type specimens of Cyclopsis tentacularis Popov 1930 from the Sea of Okhotsk may have been the former species. Probably following Lindberg and Legza (1955), Parin et al. (2002, 2014) listed E. awae from the southern Kuril Islands. However, the specimens examined by Lindberg and Legeza (1955) were not available during the present study and the record from the Sea of Okhotsk is doubtful due to the distance of that region from the area populated by E. awae .

In his review of lumpsuckers, Ueno (1970) described L. awae on the basis of nine specimens collected from Chiba, Kanagawa and Shizuoka, the Pacific coast of Honshu Is. According to his figure, the specimens had many papillae on the ventral disk, a supraorbital pore and no interorbital pores, characters consistent with the present specimens of E. awae . In addition, Ueno’s (1970) color plates of specimens (apparently> 20 mm SL) had no dark spot above anal fin origin, which also supported their identity as E. awae .

Various authors have recorded “ Lethotremus awae ” from (or near) the established range of the presently recognized E. awae [ Suzuki & Kataoka (1997), from Mie; Zama (2001), from Miyagi; Nakabo (2002), from the Pacific coast of Honshu Is.; Aizawa (2003), from Chiba; Shiogaki et al. (2004), from Aomori; Senou et al. (2006), from Sagami Bay], although these reports cannot now be attributed with certainty to E. awae as recognized here because of the lack of definitive characters. Abe and Sato (2009) also reported the reproductive biology of E. awae in Shizugawa Bay , Pacific coast of northern Honshu Is., but no presently recognized species diagnostic characters could be determined from their description and photos. Similarly, the short descriptions of L. awae in Kido (1984) , Nakabo (1993, 2000, 2002) and Nakabo and Kai (2013) did not include recognizable definitive characters, the distribution ranges given extending over those of the three species recognized here.

CAS-SU

California Academy of Sciences, Stanford University Collection

FAKU

Kyoto University

FRLM

Faculty of Fisheries, Mie University

KPM-NI

Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Scorpaeniformes

Family

Cyclopteridae

Genus

Eumicrotremus

Loc

Eumicrotremus awae

Lee, Soo Jeong, Kim, Jin-Koo, Kai, Yoshiaki, Ikeguchi, Shin’Ichiro & Nakabo, Tetsuji 2017
2017
Loc

Cyclopsis awae:

Lindberg 1955: 442
1955
Loc

Lethotremus awae

Nakabo 2013: 1202
Mecklenburg 2003: 11
Nakabo 2002: 662
Nakabo 2000: 622
Nakabo 1993: 577
Kido 1984: 337
Ueno 1970: 129
Jordan 1902: 344
1902
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