Published August 31, 2015 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Diplecogaster Fraser-Brunner 1938

  • 1. Lauda-Königshofen, Germany; & Zoology, Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde in Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany;
  • 2. Centro de Ciências do Mar, Universidade do Algarve, Faro, Portugal;
  • 3. BIOECOMAC, UD de Ciencias Marinas, Sección de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de La Laguna, La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain

Description

Diplecogaster Fraser-Brunner 1938

Diplecogaster Fraser-Brunner 1938: 415 (type species: Cyclopterus bimaculatus Bonnaterre 1788 by original designation).

Diagnosis

Three and one half gills; gill membranes attached to the isthmus; disc double; dorsal and anal fins normal with strong rays; disc length 3.2 5.2 in SL; no spine in subopercular area; 4 9 dorsal-fin rays; 3 8 anal-fin rays; 20 26 pectoral-fin rays; premaxillaries short; maxillaries well forward in position; head lateral-line system with two pores in the lacrymal canal.

Remarks

A total of six valid species is known in this genus; a checklist of the species and an

identification key are presented below.

Within the genus Diplecogaster, two species groups can be distinguished:

– Diplecogaster-bimaculata group: characterised by a moderate number of 4 8 rays in the dorsal fin and 3 7 in the anal fin (D.- ctenocrypta group: 9 rays in the dorsal fin, 8 rays in the anal fin), and the position of the anus which is situated in the middle between disc and anal-fin origin (D.- ctenocrypta group: situated closer to the analfin origin than to the end of the disc).

Species. D. bimaculata, D. euxinica, D. megalops, D. pectoralis.

Distribution. Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea, eastern Atlantic Ocean, South Africa.

– Diplecogaster-ctenocrypta group (reviewed in the present paper): characterised by a high number of 9 rays in the dorsal fin and 8 in the anal fin (D.- bimaculata group: 4 8 rays in the dorsal fin, 3 7 rays in the anal fin), and the position of the anus which is situated closer to the anal-fin origin than to the end of the disc (D.- bimaculata group: situated in the middle between disc and anal-fin origin). The species of the group are further distinguished from the Diplecogaster bimaculata, D. euxinica and D. pectoralis in having 14 15 caudalfin rays (18 21 in D. bimaculata, D. euxinica and D. pectoralis), and lacking lateral papillae in disc region A (many lateral papillae present in D. bimaculata, D. euxinica and D. pectoralis), and from D. megalops in 13 16 rakers on third gill arch (7 9 rakers in D. megalops).

Species. D. ctenocrypta, D. tonstricula n. sp.

Distribution. Eastern Atlantic Ocean.

Checklist of the species of Diplecogaster

Diplecogaster bimaculata (Bonnaterre [ex Pennant] 1788)

Cyclopterus bimaculatus Bonnaterre [ex Pennant] 1788: 29, pl, 86, figure 355 (seas of England; no types known)

Lepadogaster ocellatus Risso 1810: 74 (Villefranche-sur-Mer, France; no types known). Lepadogaster reticulatus Risso 1810: 77 (Nice, France; no types known).

Lepadogaster mirbeli Risso 1820: 249 (Nice, France; no types known).

Lepadogaster desfontanii Risso 1827: 275, pl. 14, figure 39 (Nice, France; syntypes: MZUF 584-0093, 10 specimens).

Lepadogaster latirostris Costa 1840: Lepadogaster p. 4 (Naples, Italy; no types known). Lepadogaster urifasciatus Costa 1840: Lepadogaster p. 9 (Gulf of Salerno, Italy; no types known).

Lepadogaster norvegicus Düben 1845: 112 (Norway; no types known).

Lepadogaster listellus Nardo [ex Chiereghini] 1847: col. 113 (Italy; no types known).

Lepadogaster raninus Nardo [ex Chiereghini] 1847: col. 113 (Italy; no types known).

Lepidogaster couchii Saville-Kent 1883: 55 56 (Devonshire and Cornwall, UK; no types known).

Distribution: Mediterranean Sea, north-eastern Atlantic: Norway and Faroes south to Gibraltar.

Diplecogaster ctenocrypta Briggs 1955

Diplecogaster ctenocrypta Briggs 1955: 32, figure 85 (Gran Canaria, Canary Islands; holotype: ZMUC P9037).

Distribution: Canary Islands.

Diplecogaster euxinica Murgoci 1964

Diplecogaster bimaculata euxinica Murgoci 1964: 229, figure 1 (Romania, Black Sea; holotype: MGAB 55).

Distribution. Black Sea.

Diplecogaster melagops Briggs 1955

Diplecogaster megalops Briggs 1955: 31, figure 84 (off Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; holotype: ZMUC P9031).

Distribution: South Africa.

Diplecogaster pectoralis Briggs 1955

Diplecogaster bimaculata pectoralis Briggs 1955: 30, figure 83 (Gran Canaria, Canary Islands; holotype: ZMUC P9034).

Distribution: Canary Islands, Madeira, Azores, Cape Verde Islands.

Diplecogaster tonstricula new species (present paper)

Distribution: Canary Islands, Senegal.

Key to the species of the genus Diplecogaster

1. Dorsal-fin rays 4 8; anal-fin rays 3 7............................................................................................. 2

- Dorsal-fin rays 9; anal-fin rays 8......................................................................................................... 5

2. Eye large, eye diameter 0.5 0.6 in bony interorbital, 2.3 3.6 (mean 3.25) in head length; no ocelli on sides of body; South Africa............................ Diplecogaster megalops

- Eye relatively small, eye diameter 0.7 1.2 in bony interorbital, 3.2 4.9 (mean 4.2) in head length; at least one ocellus on side of body below pectoral fin; eastern Atlantic, Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea................................................................................................................. 3

3. Snout length 3.7 7.7 in head length; upper attachment of axial, dermal flap opposite pectoral-fin rays 10 19 (mean 18); principal caudal rays 12 14.................................................................................................................... Diplecogaster euxinica

- Snout length 3.3 3.8 in head length; upper attachment of axial, dermal flap opposite pectoral-fin rays 10 13 (mean 12); principal caudal rays 9 12............................................... 4

4. Pectoral-fin rays 21 24; caudal peduncle depth 1.2 1.5 (mean 1.3); eye diameter 3.7 4.9 (mean 4.1) in head length............................................................................ Diplecogaster bimaculata

- Pectoral-fin rays 25 26; caudal peduncle depth 1.0 1.2 (mean 1.1); eye diameter 3.2 3.9 (mean 3.6) in head length................................................................................ Diplecogaster pectoralis

5. Pelvic disc with lateral papillae in region A; disc region B with 5 rows of papillae; mandibular canal with 1 pore; principal caudal-fin rays 16; interorbital distance 5.4 in head length; distance between disc and anus 19% of SL........................ Diplecogaster ctenocrypta

- Pelvic disc without lateral papillae in region A; disc region B with 2 rows of weak papillae; mandibular pores missing; principal caudal-fin rays 14 15; interorbital distance 4.1 4.6 in head length; distance between disc and anus 14 17% of SL................................................................................................... Diplecogaster tonstricula n. sp.

Notes

Published as part of Fricke, Ronald, Wirtz, Peter & Brito, Alberto, 2015, Diplecogaster tonstricula, a new species of cleaning clingfish (Teleostei: Gobiesocidae) from the Canary Islands and Senegal, eastern Atlantic Ocean, with a review of the Diplecogaster-ctenocrypta species-group, pp. 731-748 in Journal of Natural History 50 on pages 734-737, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2015.1079659, http://zenodo.org/record/3989731

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
MGAB , MZUF , ZMUC
Family
Gobiesocidae
Genus
Diplecogaster
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
MGAB 55 , MZUF 584-0093 , P9031 , P9034 , P9037
Order
Perciformes
Phylum
Chordata
Scientific name authorship
Fraser-Brunner
Taxon rank
genus
Type status
holotype , syntype
Taxonomic concept label
Diplecogaster Fraser-Brunner, 1938 sec. Fricke, Wirtz & Brito, 2015

References

  • Fraser-Brunner A. 1938. Notes on the classification of certain British fishes. Ann Mag Nat Hist. 2: 410 - 416.
  • Bonnaterre JP. 1788. Tableau encyclopedique et methodique des trois regnes de la nature … Ichthyologie. Paris: Panckoucke; lvi + 215 pp., Pls. A-B + 1 - 100.
  • Risso A. 1810. Ichthyologie de Nice, ou histoire naturelle des poissons du departement des Alpes Maritimes. Paris: F. Schoell; xxxvi + 388 pp., pls. 1 - 11.
  • Risso A. 1820. Memoire sur quelques poissons observes dans la mer de Nice. J Phys Chim Hist Nat. 91: 241 - 255.
  • Risso A. 1827. Histoire naturelle des principales productions de l ' Europe meridionale, et particulierement de celles des environs de Nice et des Alpes maritimes. Tome 3. Paris, Strasbourg: F. G. Levrault; xvi + 480 pp., Pls. 1 - 16.
  • Costa OG. 1840. Lepadogaster latirostris. (Lepadogaster p. 4). In: Fauna del regno di Napoli, ossia enumerazione di tutti gli animali che abitano le diverse regioni di questo regno e le acque che le bagnano, etc. Pesci. Part 1. Napoli; 511 pp. (variously paginated), 60 pls.
  • Duben MW von. 1845. Norriges hafs-fauna. Ofvers Kong Vet-Akad Forh, Kungl Svenska Vetenskapsakad. 1 (for 1844). 110 - 116.
  • Saville-Kent W. 1883. Marine and freshwater fishes of the British islands. Handbooks, Vol. 1 (pt. 2). London: William Clowes and Sons; viii + 129 pp.
  • Briggs JC. 1955. A monograph of the clingfishes (order Xenopterygii). Stanf Ichth Bull. 6: i-iv + 1 - 224.
  • Murgoci AA. 1964. Contribution a la connaissance des gobiesocides (ordre des Xenopterygii) de la Mer Noire. Rev Roum Biol. Ser Zool. 9: 297 - 306.