Hymenocephalus hachijoensis Okamura, 1970
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https://doi.org/10.11646/megataxa.3.1.1 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B711B23F-FF19-86C3-D99D-C139FD847858 |
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Plazi (2021-02-23 10:39:49, last updated 2024-11-28 19:05:39) |
scientific name |
Hymenocephalus hachijoensis Okamura, 1970 |
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Hymenocephalus hachijoensis Okamura, 1970 View in CoL
[Japanese name: Hachijo-sokodara]
( Figs. 135–136 View FIGURE 135 View FIGURE 136 ; Appendix 3-8A)
Hymenocephalus striatissimus hachijoensis Okamura, 1970a:50 View in CoL , pl. XVI (original description; as subspecies of H. striatissimus View in CoL Jordan & Gilbert in Jordan & Starks, 1904; holotype: BSKU 14171, from off Hachijo-jima Island, 40º03′6ʺN, 133º16′5ʺE, in 570 m; 1 paratype collected with holotype; new Japanese name: “Hachijo-sokodara”); Okamura 1970b: table 1 (listed; Japan); Tominaga & Uyeno 1981:489 (listed; Japan).
Hymenocephalus longiceps View in CoL (not Smith & Radcliffe in Radcliffe 1912): Yatou 1982:141, 246, fig. 85 (brief description; in part, ZMUT KP416; Kyushu-Palau Ridge).
Hymenocephalus hachijoensis: Okamura 1984b:92 View in CoL , pl. 80, fig. F (compiled); Okamura 1988:92, pl. 80, fig. F (compiled); Sazonov & Iwamoto 1992:62 (description; 3 additional spec. from Emperor Seamounts and Kyushu-Palau Ridge; comparisons with similar congeners); Nakabo 1993:355 (in key; Japan); Sazonov 1994:101 (brief description); Nakabo 2000:419 (in key; Japan); Nakabo 2002:419 (in key; Japan); Nakabo & Kai 2013:495 (in key; Japan); Schwarzhans 2014:49, fig. 23 (description; comparison; in key); Nakayama et al. 2015:505, figs. 1–5 (comparative material; 2 additional spec. from Hachijo-jima Island and Kyushu-Palau Ridge); Motomura 2020:39 (listed; Japan).
Diagnosis. A species of Hymenocephalus with 7 or 8 pelvic-fin rays; barbel moderately long, length 36–52% PRL, its tip not reaching vertical through hind margin of orbit when depressed; snout high, not depressed, length 25–30% PRL; orbit diameter 43–52% PRL; interorbital width 31–34% PRL; first dorsal-fin rays II,9–11; pectoralfin rays i13–i15; gill rakers on first arch (outer/inner) 12– 15/18–22, on second arch 18–20/16–20; pyloric caeca 23; dorsal half of trunk prominently blackish, but the dark area abruptly ending posterior to end of first dorsal-fin base; ventral half of tail immaculate or only slightly peppered with small black melanophores; caudal vertebrae barely visible from outside; ostial and caudal colliculi of otolith not fused.
Material examined. 8 specimens. Holotype of Hymenocephalus striatissimus hachijoensis: BSKU 14171 (32.4 mm HL, 196+ mm TL), northeast of Hachijojima Island , Shichito-Iojima Ridge, Japan, 33.2681ºN, 140.0517ºE, 570 m, coll. O. Okamura, 21 Apr. 1968 GoogleMaps . Paratype of H. s. hachijoensis: BSKU 14172 (22.6 mm HL, 128+ mm TL), collected with holotype. Non-types : Japan: ZMUT KP416 View Materials (1, 25.0 mm HL, 106+ mm TL), Kyushu-Palau Ridge , date unknown; BSKU 19308 View Materials (1, 24.7 mm HL, 133+ mm TL), off Hachijo-jima Island, Shichito-Iojima Ridge, 33.1367ºN, 139.9900ºE, 440 m, FRV Soyo-maru, sta. B3, beam trawl, 8 Dec. 1962 GoogleMaps ; * FAKU 202929 View Materials (1, 22 mm HL, 140+ mm TL), FAKU 202930 View Materials (1, 23.1 mm HL, 141+ mm TL), * FAKU 202944 View Materials (1, 19 mm HL, 133+ mm TL), Nishiura fish market, 200– 300 m, bottom trawl, coll. N. Nakayama, 21 May 2016 . Emperor Seamounts : ZMMGU P.18243 (1, 32.2 mm HL, 200 mm TL), ca. 32ºN, 173ºE, Mys Yunony, tr. 86, trawl, 6 Sept. 1979 .
Counts and measurements. Based on 6 specimens (22.6–32.4 mm HL, 106+–200+ mm TL). Counts: first dorsal-fin rays II,9–11; pectoral-fin rays i13–i15; pelvicfin rays 7–8; gill rakers on first arch (outer/inner) 12– 15/18–22, on second arch 18–20/16–20; longitudinal scales 17; transverse scale rows below first dorsal-fin origin 3.5, below first dorsal-fin midbase 3, below second dorsal-fin origin 2; pyloric caeca 23.
The following measurements are in % of HL, followed by those in % of PRL in parentheses: snout length 21–24 (25–30); orbit diameter 34–42 (43–52); postorbital length 44–49 (54–60); postrostral length 80–85; orbit–preopercle distance 40–49 (49–58); suborbital width 8–10 (10–12); upper-jaw length 51–59 (61–70); length of rictus 47–53 (57–62); length of premaxillary tooth band 43–49 (53– 58); preoral length 11–17 (14–20); distance between tip and lateral angle of snout 14–17 (17–21); snout width 24– 31 (29–38); internasal width 19–24 (23–29); interorbital width 26–27 (31–34); body width over pectoral-fin bases 35–46 (43–57); body depth at first dorsal-fin origin 64– 80 (80–94); body depth at anal-fin origin 49–54 (61–67); prepelvic length 102–113 (123–140); preanus length 169 (199); preanal length 166–172 (203–213); isthmus–pelvic distance 49–62 (58–76); isthmus–anal distance 123–124 (151–156); pelvic–anal distance 69–74 (85–88); pelvicfin length 76–87 (95–103); pectoral-fin length 48–61 (56– 75); predorsal length 100–110 (123–135); height of first dorsal fin 78–85 (92–107); length of first dorsal-fin base 33–42 (41–49); interdorsal length 63–88 (79–109); length of gill slit 31–34 (36–42); length of posterior nostril 4 (6); barbel length 30–42 (36–52).
Size. To about 20 cm TL (ZMMGU P. 18243, 200 mm TL, Emperor Seamounts).
Distribution. So far known only from Japan (Appendix 3-8A) and the Emperor Seamounts at depths of 200–710 m ( Sazonov 1994; Schwarzhans 2014; this study). Rare.
Remarks. For further morphological information see the original description ( Okamura 1970a) and a supplementary description given by Schwarzhans (2014).
Hymenocephalus hachijoensis was initially described as a subspecies of H. striatissimus Jordan & Gilbert in Jordan & Starks, 1904 based on two specimens collected from off Hachijo-jima Island, Shichito-Iojima Ridge, Japan, at a depth of 570 m ( Fig. 136 View FIGURE 136 ). Subsequently, it was recognized as a full species by Okamura (1984b, 1988), who considered H. hachijoensis to have a much larger head, a longer barbel (about equal to the orbit diameter), and a smaller orbit as compared with H. striatissimus . Based on examinations of three additional specimens from the Emperor Seamounts and Kyushu-Palau Ridge, Sazonov & Iwamoto (1992:62) and Sazonov (1994) confirmed a clear separation between the two species. Another specimen from the Kyushu-Palau Ridge ( Fig. 135A View FIGURE 135 ) originally recorded as H. longiceps by Yatou (1982) was re-identified as H. hachijoensis by Nakayama et al. (2015a); they also reported one additional specimen from the type locality (BSKU 19308, 24.7 mm HL, 133+ mm TL). Recently, three additional specimens were obtained at the Nishiura fish market in Aichi Pref., southern Japan; these specimens were originally collected from off Izuoshima Island, at a depth of 200–300 m (FAKU 202929– 202930, 202944, 19–23.1 mm HL, 133+–141+ mm TL; Fig. 135B View FIGURE 135 ). Hymenocephalus hachijoensis appears to be restricted to oceanic elevations (such as seamounts and ridges) in the northwestern Pacific.
Relationships and comparisons. Hymenocephalus hachijoensis belongs to the H.antraeus group as defined by Schwarzhans (2014). This group comprises the following four species: H. antraeus Gilbert & Cramer, 1897 endemic to Hawaii; H. hachijoensis ; H. heterolepis ( Alcock, 1889) restricted to the Andaman Sea and the Bay of Bengal; and H. punt Schwarzhans, 2014 recently described from the Gulf of Aden. According to Schwarzhans (2014), H. hachijoensis is readily distinguished from other species of the H. antraeus group by having lower counts of pelvicfin rays (7–8 vs. 10–12) and a longer barbel [30–42% HL (based on this study) vs. ±15%].
In Japan, H. hachijoensis is most similar to H. striatissimus in general appearance, but differs notably in having an otolith with two colliculi (vs. single in H. striatissimus ; see also Schwarzhans 2014: figs. 23C–D and 32D–F). It further differs from H. striatissimus in its longer barbel (36–52% PRL vs. 14–23%) and pelvic fin (95–103% PRL vs. 70–90%). Hymenocephalus hachijoensis somewhat resembles H. yamasakiorum Nakayama, Endo & Schwarzhans, 2015 in physiognomy, but differs in having lower counts of pectoral- (i13–i15 vs. i16–i17) and pelvic-fin rays (7–8 vs. 9), and higher counts of pyloric caeca (23 vs. 15). These two species are also distinguished from each other by the snout length (25– 30% PRL in H. hachijoensis vs. 37% in H. yamasakiorum ) and barbel length (36–52% PRL vs. 73%).
Alcock, A. (1889) Natural history notes from H. M. Indian marine survey steamer ' Investigator ', commander Alfred Carpenter, R. N., D. S. O., commanding. - No. 13. On the bathybial fishes of the Bay of Bengal and neighboring waters, obtained during the seasons 1885 - 1889. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 6, 4, 376 - 399. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222938909460547
Gilbert, C. H. & Cramer, F. (1897) Report on the fishes dredged in deep water near the Hawaiian Islands, with descriptions and figures of twenty-three new species. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 19, 403 - 435, pls. XXXVI-XLVIII. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.19 - 1114.403
Jordan, D. S. & Starks, E. C. (1904) List of fishes dredged by the steamer Albatross off the coast of Japan in the summer of 1900, with descriptions of new species and a review of the Japanese Macrouridae. Bulletin of the U. S. Fish Commission, 22, 577 - 630, pls. 1 - 8.
Motomura, H. (2020) List of Japan's All Fish Species. Current Standard Japanese and Scientific Names of All Fish Species Recorded from Japanese Waters. The Kagoshima University Museum, Kagoshima, 560 pp. [In Japanese.]
Nakabo, T. (1993) Macrouridae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with Pictorial Keys to the Species. 1 st Edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 353 - 371, 1276 - 1277. [In Japanese.]
Nakabo, T. (2000) Macrouridae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with Pictorial Keys to the Species. 2 nd Edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 417 - 435, 1494. [In Japanese.]
Nakabo, T. (2002) Macrouridae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with Pictorial Keys to the Species. English Edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 417 - 435, 1491 - 1492. [In Japanese.]
Nakabo, T. & Kai, Y. (2013) Macrouridae. In: Nakabo, T. (Ed.), Fishes of Japan with Pictorial Keys to the Species. 3 rd Edition. Tokai University Press, Hadano, pp. 493 - 512, 1872 - 1876. [In Japanese.]
Nakayama, N., Endo, H. & Schwarzhans, W. (2015 a) A new grenadier of the genus Hymenocephalus from Tosa Bay, southern Japan (Actinopterygii: Gadiformes: Macrouridae). Ichthyological Research, 62, 504 - 511. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1007 / s 10228 - 015 - 0464 - 9
Okamura, O. (1970 a) Fauna Japonica, Macrourina (Pisces). Academic Press of Japan, Tokyo, 216 pp., 64 pls.
Okamura, O. (1970 b) Studies on the macrouroid fishes of Japan: morphology, ecology and phylogeny. Reports of the Usa Marine Biological Station, 17, 1 - 179, pls. I-V.
Okamura, O. (1984 b) Macrouroidei. In: Masuda, H., Amaoka, K., Araga, C., Uyeno, T. & Yoshino, T. (Eds.), The Fishes of the Japanese Archipelago. 1 st Edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 93 - 99, pls. 79 - 83. [In Japanese.]
Okamura, O. (1988) Macrouroidei. In: Masuda, H., Amaoka, K., Araga, C., Uyeno, T. & Yoshino, T. (Eds.), The Fishes of the Japanese Archipelago. 2 nd Edition. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 93 - 99, 453, pls. 79 - 83, 344 - 373.
Radcliffe, L. (1912) Description of a new family, two new genera, and twenty-nine new species of anacanthine fishes from the Philippine Islands and contiguous waters. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 43, 105 - 140, pls. 22 - 31. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.43 - 1924.105
Sazonov, Y. I. & Iwamoto, T. (1992) Grenadiers (Pisces, Gadiformes) of the Nazca and Sala y Gomez Ridges, southeastern Pacific. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 48, 27 - 95.
Sazonov, Y. I. (1994) Additions to the list of macrourids (Gadiformes, Bathygadidae, and Macrouridae) from the Northwest Pacific Ridge. Journal of Ichthyology, 34, 98 - 115. [Originally published in Russian in Voprosy Ikhtiologii, 34, 149 - 160.]
Schwarzhans, W. (2014) Head and otolith morphology of the genera Hymenocephalus, Hymenogadus and Spicomacrurus (Macrouridae), with the description of three new species. Zootaxa, 3888, 1 - 73. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3888.1.1
Tominaga, Y. & Uyeno, T. (1981) List of Japanese fishes. In: Yasuda, F., Takagi, K., Tominaga, Y., Uyeno, T., Abe, T., Ishiyama, R., Iwai, T., Ochiai, A., Kuronuma, K. & Nakamura, M. (Eds.), Dictionary of Japanese Fish Names and Their Foreign Equivalents. Sanseido Co., Ltd., Tokyo, pp. 437 - 574.
Yatou, T. (1982) Hymenocephalus and Coelorhynchus [in part]. In: Okamura, O., Amaoka, K. & Mitani, F. (Eds.), Fishes of the Kyushu-Palau Ridge and Tosa Bay. Japan Fisheries Resource Conservation Association, Tokyo, pp. 140 - 143, 170 - 171, 180 - 181, 346 - 347, 353.
FIGURE 135. Fresh specimens of Hymenocephalus hachijoensis. (A) ZMUT KP416, 25.0 mm HL, 106+ mm TL, Kyushu-Palau Ridge, Pacific, 685–710 m depth; (B) FAKU 202929, 147+ mm TL, Nishiura fish market, Aichi Pref., Pacific. Lateral views. [Photos: (A) ZMUT; (B) N. Nakayama]
FIGURE 136. Holotype of Hymenocephalus striatissimus hachijoensis (= H. hachijoensis). BSKU 14171, 32.4 mm HL, 196+ mm TL, northeast of Hachijo-jima Island, Shichito-Iojima Ridge, Pacific, 570 m depth. (A) Lateral view; (B) dorsal and (C) ventral views of the head and trunk. Preserved condition. [Photos: N. Nakayama]
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Hymenocephalus hachijoensis Okamura, 1970
Nakayama, Naohide 2020 |
Hymenocephalus hachijoensis:
Okamura 1984: 92 |
Hymenocephalus striatissimus hachijoensis
Okamura 1970: 50 |
Hymenocephalus longiceps
Smith & Radcliffe in Radcliffe 1912 |