Caraibops Prokofiev & Schwarzhans

Schwarzhans, Werner W. & Prokofiev, Artem M., 2017, Reappraisal of Synagrops Günther, 1887 with rehabilitation and revision of Parascombrops Alcock, 1889 including description of seven new species and two new genera (Perciformes: Acropomatidae), Zootaxa 4260 (1), pp. 1-74 : 13

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.571305

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F65E9759-46EB-40B0-B51A-D970B925DEA3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6042827

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6D0AA64D-3B4C-FFD8-FF16-FD80FEAC0DFD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Caraibops Prokofiev & Schwarzhans
status

gen. nov.

Genus Caraibops Prokofiev & Schwarzhans View in CoL View at ENA , new genus

Type-species (monotypic): Synagrops trispinosus Mochizuki & Sano, 1984

Diagnosis. A genus diagnosed by the combination of 8 externally visible D1 spines and an anal-fin ray formula III + 9, and distinctive in the following combination of additional characters: pelvic-fin spine with regular sharp serrations along its outer margin from base to tip; no basioccipital fossa, no otophysic connection and no posterior openings of the myodome; three supraneurals, predorsal formula 0/0/0+2/; 9th D1 spine minute, only seen on radiographs; no vacant interneural gap below D1; distal element of last D1 pterygiophore enlarged; epaxialis attachment type 0; ectopterygoid toothless; cranial crests W-shaped but weak; inner edge of preopercle smooth (in adults) to finely denticulate or crenulate (in juveniles); otolith slender (OL:OH = 1.9–2.05) with pronounced postdorsal and low mid-dorsal region.

Discussion. Caraibops shares with Parascombrops the presence of a serrated pelvic-fin spine, considered to represent a synapomorphy for both genera. It differs in the absence of the vacant interneural gap below D1 (vs 8th interneural gap vacant), the predorsal formula (0/0/0+2/ vs /0+0/0+2/), both probably plesmiorphic character states, a higher number of branched rays in the anal fin (9 vs 6–7), the smooth inner rim of the preopercle in adult fish (vs always conspicuously serrated), a weakly developed cranial crests, the absence of denticles on the ectopterygoid and epaxialis attachment type 0 (vs 1); the polarity of the latter four characters being unresolved.

Caraibops View in CoL and Parascombrops View in CoL show a striking difference in epaxial muscle attachments to the dorsal-fin pterygiophores (0 and 1, respectively). Mooi & Gill (1995) indicated several cases of intrafamiliar variations in this character, i.e. within Plesiopidae View in CoL ( types 0 or 2), Sciaenidae View in CoL ( types 0 or 2), Cirrhitidae View in CoL ( types 1 or 2), and Labridae View in CoL ( types 0 or 2). Furthermore, the distribution of type 1 within the percoid and trachinoid families studied by Mooi & Gill (1995: Table 1), indicates that the independent origin of the type 1 in different taxa cannot be excluded. On the other hand, they also consider the possibility of a secondary loss of type 1 epaxial insertion. We find no grounds to resolve either variant in the case of Caraibops View in CoL .

Etymology. From “caraib”, a collective name for the Indian tribes formerly inhabiting the Caribbean basin, combined with the ending -ops for the similar sounding to the related genus Parascombrops .

Species and distribution. A monotypic genus comprising C. trispinosus ( Mochizuki & Sano 1984) , known from the tropical Western Atlantic, in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean southwards to Suriname at 36 to 550 m (mostly below 135 m) . Fossil otoliths are known from the Early Pliocene Cubagua Formation, Cerro Negro Member of the Araya Peninsula in Venezuela, figured as Parascombrops aff. argyreus (Gilbert & Cramer 1896) in Nolf (2013) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

SubOrder

Percoidei

Family

Acropomatidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) CoL Data Package (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF