Bulbonaricus davaoensis ( Herald, 1953 )

Araki, Moeri, Uehara, Kazutoshi, Senou, Hiroshi & Motomura, Hiroyuki, 2020, First Records of the Pughead-pipefish Bulbonaricus davaoensis (Teleostei: Syngnathidae) from Japan, Species Diversity 25, pp. 163-169 : 163-168

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.12782/specdiv.25.163

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/89264310-FF99-8517-C0A2-F921FE9B5BD2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Bulbonaricus davaoensis ( Herald, 1953 )
status

 

Bulbonaricus davaoensis ( Herald, 1953) View in CoL

[English name: Davao Pughead-pipefish; new standard Japanese name: Shuuyajiri-chin’yojiuo] ( Figs 1–4 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Table 1)

Ichthyocampus (Bulbonaricus) davaoensis Herald, 1953: 243 View in CoL , fig. 37 (type locality: Davao Gulf , Mindanao, Philippines) .

Enchelyocampus sp. : Dawson 1980: 224, fig. 3 (Taam Island, Banda Sea, Indonesia).

Enchelyocampus brauni View in CoL (non Dawson and Allen, 1978): Dawson 1980: 225, fig. 4 (off Cape Melville, Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, Australia).

Bulbonaricus davaoensis: Dawson 1984: 566 View in CoL , figs 1–3 ( Ras Iwatine , Mombasa, Kenya; Davao Gulf, Mindanao, Luzon Island, Negros Island, the Philippines; Talisei Island, Ambon Island, Moluccas and Taam Island, Banda Sea, Indonesia; Viti Levu Island, Fiji); Dawson 1985: 27, fig. 47 ( Ras Iwatine , Mombasa, Kenya; Davao Gulf, Mindanao, the Philippines; Talisei Island, Ambon Island, Moluccas and Taam Island, Banda Sea, Indonesia; off Cape Melville, Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, Australia; Viti Levu Island, Fiji); Paxton and Hanley 1989: 413 (Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia); Randall and Lim 2000: 603 (South China Sea); Allen and Adrim 2003: 27 ( Papua New Guinea to Moluccas and North Sulawesi); Paxton et al. 2006: 813 (Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia); Kuiter 2009: 290, unnumbered fig. (locality unknown); Allen and Erdmann 2012: 187, unnumbered fig. (off Cape Melville, Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, Australia); Fricke et al. 2014: 45 (Madang, Papua New Guinea); Ho and Lin 2014: 26, figs 1–3 (Kenting, Pingtung, Taiwan).

Material examined. 5 specimens (2 males and 3 females) from Japan: KAUM –I . 134391, female, 44.6 mm SL, KAUM –I. 134392, male, 41.2 mm SL, KAUM –I. 134393, female, 47.0 mm SL, 187 m off west of Tamina , China, Okinoerabu Island , Amami Islands, Kagoshima Prefecture, 27°22′49″N, 128°31′10″E, 15 m depth, K GoogleMaps . Uehara , 16 November 2019; KPM-NI 23063 View Materials , male, 44.1+mm SL, KPM- NI 23064 , female, 40.9+mm SL, Futami Bay , Chichi Island , Ogasawara Islands, Tokyo, 27°05′N, 142°11′E, 6 m depth, O GoogleMaps . Morishita, 10 January 2009.

Underwater photographs examined. All from Japan . KPM-NR 97525, Nominoura , Oshima Strait , Kakeroma Island , Amami Islands, Ryukyu Islands, 5 m depth, 24 July 2008, photo by M . Kanazawa ; KAUM –II . 83, Tamina , China, Okinoerabu Island , Amami Islands, Ryukyu Islands, 27°22′49″N, 128°31′10″E, 15 m depth, 16 November 2019, K GoogleMaps . Uehara ; KPM-NR 70435, Kitaya , Okinawa Island , Okinawa Islands, Ryukyu Islands, 20 m depth, 11 September 2009, N . Shirakawa ; KPM-NR 142824, Zamami Island , Kerama Islands, Ryukyu Islands, 7.7 m depth, 11 November 2013, H . Uchino ; KPM-NR 92881, Nagura Bay , Ishigaki Island , Yaeyama Islands, Ryukyu Islands, 7 m depth, 6 May 2007, T . Uchida ; KPM-NR 95967, Ishigaki Island , Yaeyama Islands, Ryukyu Islands, 10 m depth, June 2006, Y . Yamada ; KPM-NR 97443, Futami Port , Chichi Island, Ogasawara Islands, 7 m depth, 1989, M . Satou ; KPM-NR 97444, 97445, 97446, 206006, Futami Port , Chichi Island, Ogasawara Islands, 6 m depth, 5 January 2009, O . Morishita ; KPM-NR 97448, Ogasawara Islands, 2009, O . Morishita .

Description. Counts and measurements given in Table 1. Head, including frontal process, illustrated in Fig. 2 View Fig . Body elongate, slightly compressed. Body ridges smooth. Superior trunk and tail ridges continuous; lateral trunk ridge straight, ending at anal ring; inferior trunk and tail ridges continuous; median ventral trunk ridge indistinct. Head covered with fleshy integument. Snout very short, rounded; mouth inferior; both lips fleshy. Opercle without distinct ridges. Frontal process rounded in cross section, spine-like, smooth on dorsal margin; brood pouch on ventral surface of first to 20th (KPM-NI 230063) or 22nd (KAUM–I. 134392) tail rings in males; pectoral, dorsal, and anal fins absent; caudal fin small in Okinoerabu Island specimens (KAUM–I. 134391–134393), lost in Chichi Island specimens (KPM-NI 23063, 23064) due to damaged tail.

Color when fresh ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). Okinoerabu Island specimens: body brownish-red dorsally, white ventrally. Dorsal surface of head greenish-red, with single white V-shaped mark anteriorly. Single deep red margin on ventral and posterior edges of opercle in males; single white line on lateral surface of trunk, spots absent; base of brood pouch reddishbrown. Caudal fin white. Chichi Island specimens: body pale brownish-white dorsally, white ventrally. Base of brood pouch brownish-orange. Single black margin on ventral and posterior edges of opercle in males. Live color illustrated in Fig. 3 View Fig .

Distribution. Bulbonaricus davaoensis has been record- ed from Kenya ( Ras Iwatine , Mombasa), Taiwan (Kenting, Pingtung), the Philippines (Davao Gulf, Mindanao), Indonesia (Talisei Island, Ambon Island, Moluccas; Taam Island, Banda Sea; and Liki Island, Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea (Madang), Australia (off Cape Melville, Cape York Peninsula, Queensland), and Fiji (Viti Levu Island) ( Herald 1953; Dawson 1984, 1985; Fricke et al. 2014; Ho and Lin 2014). The species is newly recorded from Okinoerabu Island (Amami Islands, Ryukyu Islands) and Chichi Island (Ogasawara Islands), Japan on the basis of voucher specimens, and Kakeroma Island (Amami Islands), Okinawa Island (Okinawa Islands), Zamami Island (Kerama Islands), and Ishigaki Island (Yaeyama Islands), Ryukyu Islands, Japan on the basis of underwater photographs (this study).

Remarks. Characters of the Japanese specimens agreed well with those of the genus Bulbonaricus defined by Dawson (1984) and Suzuki et al. (2002), in having the following characters: superior trunk and tail ridges confluent; inferior trunk and tail ridges confluent; lateral trunk ridge straight; trunk rings 16–18; total rings 59–63; anal fin absent; caudalfin rays 10 (in one specimen; counts in remaining specimens not available); head covered with fleshy integument, opercle without distinct ridges, snout short and rounded, mouth inferior, both lips fleshy, and brood pouch on ventral surface of tail in males (KAUM–I. 134392 and KPM-NI 23063). The following characters found in the Japanese specimens were consistent with diagnostic characters of B. davaoensis at the metamorphosed adult stage, given by Dawson (1984): frontal process rounded in cross section, spine-like, with smooth dorsal margin; dorsal, pectoral and anal fins absent; a single white line on lateral surface of trunk; and scattered spots absent on head and body. By comparison, similar stage congeners were characterized by scattered white spots on the head and body ( B. brauni ) and the frontal process V-shaped, with the dorsal margin spinose or denticulate ( B. brauni and B. brucei ) ( Dawson 1984; this study). Although Dawson (1984) described B. davaoensis as having 16 or 17 trunk rings (based on examination of 17 specimens), KAUM–I. 134391 (44.6 mm SL, Okinoerabu Island) had 18 trunk rings.

Live coloration of B. davaoensis has been poorly known to date. Although Allen and Erdmann (2012) stated “live coloration unknown”, Dawson (1984) briefly described two African metamorphosed adult specimens as “pale pink color in smaller specimen and green in larger” (provided from collector). Subsequently, Ho and Lin (2014: figs 1–3) provided photographs of a dark red individual and a newly hatched larva. The present Japanese specimens were reddish (Ryukyu Islands individuals, Fig. 3A View Fig ) and greenish (Ogasawara Islands individuals, Fig. 3B, C View Fig ). Because the body sizes and morphology of these specimens were similar, with both sexes included in each color form, it is likely that coloration changes according to individual condition and/or host coral condition or species. Thus coloration differences are unlikely to represent species or population differences, although Dawson (1984) suspected that “more than one taxon may be included in Pacific Ocean material”.

All of the Japanese specimens were collected from cavi- opted by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan; and the “Island Research” project of Kagoshima University.

ties between polyps of Galaxea sp. , a colonial stony coral, at depths of 6–15 m ( Fig. 3 View Fig ), at least one male and female pair being found per coral. A male from Okinoerabu Island ( KAUM –I. 134392, 41.2 mm SL) had nine eggs in the brood pouch (some eggs probably lost during collection and transportation or already hatched just before collection) . The eggs were well developed, enabling the extraction of a larva ( KAUM –I. 134394, 4.9 mm SL; Fig. 4 View Fig ) from one egg before preservation . The larval form was non-metamorphosed planktonic, being characterized by a laterally compressed short tubiform snout with terminal mouth; dorsal and pectoral fins, and a well-developed caudal fin . A color photograph of the fresh larval specimen is provided here. Notable larval coloration included: body translucent with several brownish vertical bands; two white blotches at dorsal-fin base; and lower two-thirds of caudal fin black ( Fig. 4 View Fig ) .

The northernmost record of B . davaoensis has previously been regarded as Kenting , southern Taiwan ( Ho and Lin 2014) . Accordingly , the present five specimens represent the first records of B . davaoensis from Japan in which the Okinoerabu Island specimens are the northernmost specimen-based record for the species . The new standard Japanese name “Shuuyajiri-chin’yojiuo” is herein proposed for B . davaoensis based on the male specimen from Okinoerabu Island ( KAUM –I. 134392, 41.2 mm SL) . “Shuu” and “yajiri” mean “white” in Okinoerabu Island dialect and “arrowhead” in standard Japanese, respectively, and “Chin’yojiuo” is the common Japanese name for the genus Bulbonaricus .

KAUM

Kagoshima University Museum

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Syngnathiformes

Family

Syngnathidae

Genus

Bulbonaricus

Loc

Bulbonaricus davaoensis ( Herald, 1953 )

Araki, Moeri, Uehara, Kazutoshi, Senou, Hiroshi & Motomura, Hiroyuki 2020
2020
Loc

Bulbonaricus davaoensis: Dawson 1984: 566

Fricke, R. & Allen, G. R. & Andrefouet, S. & Chen, W. - J. & Hamel, M. A. & Laboute, P. & Mana, R. & Tan, H. - H. & Uyeno, D. 2014: 45
Ho, H. - C. & Lin, C. - W. 2014: 26
Allen, G. R. & Erdmann, M. 2012: 187
Kuiter, R. H. 2009: 290
Paxton, J. R. & Gates, J. E. & Hoese, D. F. & Bray, D. J. 2006: 813
Allen, G. R. & Adrim, M. 2003: 27
Randall, J. E. & Lim, K. K. 2000: 603
Paxton, J. R. & Hanley, J. E. 1989: 413
Dawson, C. E. 1985: 27
Dawson, C. E. 1984: 566
1984
Loc

Enchelyocampus sp.

Dawson, C. E. 1980: 224
1980
Loc

Enchelyocampus brauni

Dawson, C. E. 1980: 225
1980
Loc

Ichthyocampus (Bulbonaricus) davaoensis

Herald, E. S. 1953: 243
1953
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