Barathronus bicolor Goode & Bean, 1886

Nielsen, Jørgen G., 2019, Revision of the circumglobal genus Barathronus (Ophidiiformes, Bythitidae) with a new species from the eastern North Atlantic Ocean, Zootaxa 4679 (2), pp. 231-256 : 237-239

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4679.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A3A1CEE3-DA6D-4CF8-B529-7200B987C51F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3797811

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0A6687ED-8B2D-D17A-FF0B-FF673B68FEC1

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Barathronus bicolor Goode & Bean, 1886
status

 

Barathronus bicolor Goode & Bean, 1886 View in CoL

Table 1. Figs. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 7–8 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 8

Barathronus bicolor Goode & Bean, 1886: 164 View in CoL (type locality: 16°03’10’’N, 61°52’20’’W).

Barathronus bicolor: Gilchrist 1906: 158 View in CoL ; Nielsen et al. 1968: 247; Nielsen 1969: 31; Rannou et al. 1975: 1255; Nielsen et al. 1999: 138; Nielsen et al. 2015: 58.

Material examined (74 specimens). Old material (54 specimens, SL 58–140 mm). See Nielsen (1969 —station data for 42 specimens), Rannou et al. (1975 —station data for 9 specimens) and Nielsen, Mincarone & Di Dario(2015 - station data for 3 specimens). New material (20 specimens, SL 72–115 mm): MNHN 1963-0630 View Materials (SL 98 mm, female), Gulf of Mexico , 24°25’1.2’’N, 83°28’58.8’’W GoogleMaps , RV Oregon , st. 4145, trawl, 549 m, 14 Dec. 1962 . TCWC 6154.2 View Materials (SL 115 mm, female), Gulf of Mexico , 18°54’N, 94°58.8’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 69A11-27, trawl, 780–825 m, 14 Aug. 1969 . TCWC 3972.1 View Materials (SL 100 mm, female), Gulf of Mexico , 19°01’N, 94°59’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 69A11-39, trawl, 1300–1390 m, 15 Aug. 1969 . TCWC 3791.12 View Materials (SL 85 mm, female), Caribbean Sea, 11°33.8’N, 73°45.1’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 70A10-31, trawl, 735 m, 17 July 1970 . TCWC 6319.10 View Materials (SL 100 mm, female), Gulf of Mexico , 27°27.8’N, 92°46’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 71A7-43, trawl, 1010–1100 m , 22 July , 1971 . TCWC 6326.2 View Materials (SL 72 mm, female), Gulf of Mexico , 25°52’N, 93°15.8’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 71A8-13, 20 meter trawl, 3270 m, 31 July 1971 . TCWC 5322.1 View Materials (SL 95 mm, male), Gulf of Mexico , 23°17.4’N, 97°02.4’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 72A13-23, 20 m trawl, 1010–1080 m, 12 July 1972 . TCWC 5323.1 View Materials (SL 95 mm, male), Gulf of Mexico , 27°26.4’N, 94°07.6’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st.72A13-39, 20 m trawl, 1290 m, 14 July 1972 . TCWC 3561.5 View Materials (SL 90 mm, male), Gulf of Mexico , 27°15.3’N, 93°41.1’W GoogleMaps , RV Alaminos , st. 73A10-20, trawl, 810–1140 m, 23 June 1973 . TCWC 5324.1 View Materials (SL 103 mm, female), Gulf of Mexico , 29°11’N, 87°57’W GoogleMaps , RV Oregon II, st. 37718, 40’ trawl, 552 m, 30 Oct. 1982 . ZMH 119884 View Materials (SL 95 mm, female), off Cape Fear, 33°38’N, 76°04’W GoogleMaps , RV Anton Dohrn 2, trawl, 796–800 m, 11 Aug. 1979 . UF 222576 (2 spms., SL 98–105 mm, female and male), Caribbean Sea, 10.27° N, 76.05°W GoogleMaps , RV Pillsbury , st. PIL388, trawl, 814–1050 m, 15 July 1966 . UF 233386 (SL 92 mm, female), Anguilla, 18.49°N, 63.41°W GoogleMaps , RV Pillsbury , PIL988, trawl, 686–724 m, 23 July 1969 . UF 235370 (SL 107 mm, female), Tongue of the Ocean, 24.18°N, 77.39°W GoogleMaps , RV Columbus Iselin , CI302, trawl, 1452–1465 m, 3 Apr. 1975 . UF 131282 (SL 112 mm, female), Tongue of the Ocean, 23.57°N, 76.71°W GoogleMaps , RV Columbus Iselin , st. CI370, trawl, 1267–1296 m, 23 Aug. 1975 . UF 109362 (SL 100 mm, female) Strait of Florida , 24°14’31.2’’N, 82°36’49.8’’W GoogleMaps , RV Bellows , st. FFS98-5B, 510 m, 1 May 1998 . ZMUC P77463 (SL 91 mm, male), Gulf of Mexico , 24°49’N, 96°27’W GoogleMaps , RV Oregon , st. 4814, 40’ shrimp trawl, 914 m, 12 Apr. 1964 . ZMUC P77708 (SL 90 mm, male), Tongue of the Ocean, 24°25.9’-24.2’N to 77°24.0’- 23.6’W , RV Columbus Iselin , cr. CI-8007, st. C039, 30’ otter trawl, 1584–1594 m, 14 Sep. 1980 . ZMUC P77709 (SL 105, female), Tongue of the Ocean, 23°48.2’- 48.6’N, 77°04.5´- 07.8’W , RV Columbus Iselin , cr. CI-8007, st. CO42, 30’ otter trawl, 1376– 1371 m, 15 Sep. 1980

Remarks. B. bicolor is the most commonly caught Barathronus species due to the extensive trawling in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea - often on the upper Continental Shelf.

Diagnosis. Barathronus bicolor differs from the other five species of the genus with dark-pigmented peritoneum by the following combination of characters: dorsal-fin rays 62–78, anal-fin rays 46–59, pectoral-fin rays 22–27, long rakers on anterior gill arch 28–35, precaudal vertebrae 31–36, total vertebrae 68–75, 1–5 fangs on vomer, paired bulbs at basis of penis not developed, no ventral flexure of anteriormost vertebrae. Penis in ripe specimens long (up to 15% SL) and slender. Newly caught specimens light brownish with dark-blue peritoneum. Otolith almost circular three times as long as thick and centrally placed sulcus 3–4 times in length of otolith ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

Description. For a detailed description based on 42 specimens see Nielsen (1969: 34). The principal meristic and morphometric characters are shown in Table 1.

Comparisons. Table 1 shows that B. bicolor is very similar to B. diaphanus with an overlap in all characters mentioned. The only differences are found in the coloration of body and in the form of the penis. All freshly caught specimens of B. diaphanus are bright red ( Fig. 10A View FIGURE 10 ) while a red specimen of B. bicolor has never been observed. The latter statement is based on observations made by colleagues with year-long trawling experiences in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. Fig. 7B View FIGURE 7 shows that the penis in ripe specimens of B. bicolor is long (up to 15% SL) and slender with the thickness at basis of penis 13% length of penis while the thickness at basis of penis of an equally long specimen of B. diaphanus ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ) is 31% of length of penis. The distribution of the two species is non-overlapping as B. bicolor is found in the West Atlantic and B. diaphanus from off East Africa to Japan and southwestern Pacific. A DNA analysis of the two species has not been made.

Distribution ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Barathronus bicolor is found in the West Atlantic from Cape Fear N.C. (33°38’N) (ZMH 119884) southwards to off Rio de Janeiro (23°46.7’S) (USU 01502). Gilchrist (1906: 158) refers a 120 mm specimen caught ENE of Cape Agulhas to B. bicolor , but the identification cannot be checked as the specimen is lost. The specimens were caught at depths of 366–1640 m, except for one from 3270 m—all in bottom working trawls.

RV

Collection of Leptospira Strains

UF

Florida Museum of Natural History- Zoology, Paleontology and Paleobotany

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Ophidiiformes

Family

Aphyonidae

Genus

Barathronus

Loc

Barathronus bicolor Goode & Bean, 1886

Nielsen, Jørgen G. 2019
2019
Loc

Barathronus bicolor: Gilchrist 1906: 158

Nielsen, J. G. & Mincarone, M. M. & Dario, F. D. 2015: 58
Nielsen, J. G. & Cohen, D. M. & Markle, D. F. & Robins, C. R. 1999: 138
Rannou, M. & Nielsen, J. G. & Hureau, J. - C. 1975: 1255
Nielsen, J. G. 1969: 31
Nielsen, J. G. & Jespersen, A & Munk, O. 1968: 247
Gilchrist, J. D. F. 1906: 158
1906
Loc

Barathronus bicolor

Goode, G. B. & Bean, T. H. 1886: 164
1886
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