Plectorhinchus pictus (Thunberg, 1792)

Habib, Kazi Ahsan, Islam, Md Jayedul, Nahar, Najmun, Rashed, Mohammad, Neogi, Amit Kumer & Russell, Barry, 2021, Grunts (Actinopterygii: Perciformes: Haemulidae) of Bangladesh with two new distributional records from the northern Bay of Bengal assessed by morphometric characters and DNA barcoding, Acta Ichthyologica et Piscatoria 51 (3), pp. 299-309 : 299

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/aiep.51.67043

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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9519A2A9-5D40-47FD-AC43-A5F43AFC0DED

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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2DE6ED23-F86D-5248-9E12-BEB025803E88

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scientific name

Plectorhinchus pictus (Thunberg, 1792)
status

 

Plectorhinchus pictus (Thunberg, 1792) View in CoL

Local common name: futki datina (Bangla) Fig. 2a View Figure 2

Material examined.

Bangladesh • 2 specimens; F1804SM-21 (110 mm SL), Cox's Bazar , Bay of Bengal, Saint Martin’s Island, 20°36'39.6"N, 92°19'37.2"E, 20 April 2018, Amit Kumer Neogi, GenBank: MK340608 View Materials GoogleMaps ; F1804SM-22(105 mm SL), Cox's Bazar , Bay of Bengal, Saint Martin’s Island, 20°36'39.6"N, 92°19'37.2"E, 20 April 2018, Amit Kumer Neogi, GenBank: MK340609 View Materials GoogleMaps .

Diagnostic characters.

Meristics: D-X, 23; P1-17; P2-I, 5; A-III, 7; C-18

Body deep and compressed. Profile of snout steep; lips fleshy; chin with six pores, but no median pit; lower jaw without longitudinal groove at midline. Caudal peduncle slender and long; scales small, ctenoid. Color varying greatly with size. Juveniles dark brown to black above, 4 broad longitudinal black bands on the body, silvery yellow below; dorsal and caudal fins yellow with black patches and broken stripes (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ).

Remarks.

This species has previously been included by the majority of authors in the genus Diagramma Oken, 1817, but recent phylogenetic analyses ( Sanciangco et al. 2011; Tavera et al. 2012; Tavera et al. 2018) have shown that Diagramma (including type species D. pictus ) is deeply nested within Plectorhinchus (and sister to its type species Plectorhinchus chaetodonoides Lacepède, 1801), and Tavera et al. (2018) have proposed that Diagramma should be considered a junior synonym of Plectorhinchus Lacepède, 1801. As pointed out by Parenti (2019), however, accepting Plectorhinchus as the senior synonym of Diagramma creates several nomenclatural problems: Plectorhinchus pictus (Tortonese, 1936) becomes a secondary homonym of P. pictus (Thunberg, 1792), and the next available name for P. pictus (Tortonese) is Plectorhinchus cinctus punctatatus Fang, 1942 (see Fricke et al. 2021b) which is secondarily preoccupied in Plectorhinchus by Diagramma puncatatum Cuvier, 1830 (see Fricke et al. 2021b). This problem was long ago recognized by Whitley (1951), who anticipated Diagramma as a synonym of Plectorhinchus and accordingly proposed the name Plectorhinchus fangi Whitley, 1951, as a replacement for P. cinctus punctatus Fang (a species not yet recorded from the Bay of Bengal). Thus, we regard Plectorhinchus pictus (Thunberg, 1792) as the correct name for the species described here from Bangladesh.

Specimens of P. pictus from the Bay of Bengal are part of a distinct subspecies, Plectorhinchus pictus cinerascens Cuvier, 1830-one of five geographically separate subspecies recognized by Johnson et al. (2001, as Diagramma ): P. pictus pictus (Thunberg), P. pictus labiosum Macleay, P. pictus punctatum Cuvier, and P. pictus centurio Cuvier). Plectorhinchus pictus , subspecies Plectorhinchus pictus cinerascens of Johnson et al. (2001) differs from all others in the configuration of the body stripes of juveniles, size of spots, and nature of the lines on the cheeks and operculum of large juveniles to small adults. Juveniles of about 150 mm TL often have broad, clearly defined body stripes, not yet beginning to break into broken lines or numerous spots; and progress from a striped to a fully spotted phase at 180-240 mm TL ( Johnson et al. 2001: fig. 5). A more detailed genetic study is necessary to determine whether this geographically distinct color variety should be afforded separate species recognition ( Johnson et al. 2001).

Distribution.

Plectorhinchus pictus cinerascens , occurs from the Bay of Bengal to the Arabian/Persian Gulf ( Johnson et al. 2001).

Conservation status.

Not yet assessed, not listed in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/123439745/123494892).

Fricke, R, Eschmeyer, WN, Van der Laan, R, 2021b. Eschmeyer's catalog of Fishes: genera, species, references. California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, CA, USA. [Accessed on 23 April 2021] http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp

Johnson, JW, Randall, JE, Chenoweth, SF, 2001. Diagramma melanacrum, new species of haemulid fish from Indonesia, Borneo and the Philippines with a generic review. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 46 (2): 657 - 676

Parenti, P, 2019. An annotated checklist of the fishes of the family Haemulidae (Teleostei: Perciformes). Iranian Journal of Ichthyology 6 (3): 150 - 196

Sanciangco, MD, Rocha, LA, Carpenter, KE, 2011. A molecular phylogeny of the grunts (Perciformes: Haemulidae) inferred using mitochondrial and nuclear genes. Zootaxa 2966: 37 - 50, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2966.1.4

Tavera, J, Acero, A, Balart, E, Bernardi, G, 2012. Molecular phylogeny of grunts (Teleostei, Haemulidae), with an emphasis on the ecology, evolution, and speciation history of New World species. BMC Evolutionary Biology 12: 57. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-12-57

Tavera, J, Acero, PA, Wainwright, PC, 2018. Multilocus phylogeny, divergence times, and a major role for the benthic-to-pelagic axis in the diversification of grunts (Haemulidae). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 121: 213 - 223, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2017.12.032

Whitley, GP, 1951. New fish names and records. Proceedings of the Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales 1949-1950: 61-68.

Gallery Image

Figure 2. Lateral view of collected specimen, a. Plectorhinchus pictus, subspecies Plectorhinchus pictus cinerascens (F 1804 SM- 22; 105 SL mm), striped juvenile phase; b. Plectorhinchus macrospilus (F 1803 SM- 67; 335 mm SL); c. Plectorhinchus andamanensis, (F 1803 SM- 19; 137 mm SL); d. Pomadasys argenteus (F 1602 Sb- 01; 132 mm SL).