Published December 31, 2015 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Dysomma goslinei Robins & Robins 1976

Description

Dysomma goslinei Robins & Robins, 1976

Table 2

Dysomma goslinei Robins & Robins, 1976:261 (type locality: Indian Ocean, 14°52'N, 96°39'W). Robins & Robins, 1989:249. Smith, 1999:1661. Chen & Mok, 2001:79.

Diagnosis. Pectoral fin present; dorsal-fin origin before pectoral-fin base, predorsal length 10.7% TL; anus anterior, just below pectoral fin, preanal length 16.2% TL; trunk very short, trunk length 4.0% TL; no intermaxillary teeth; multiple rows of teeth on upper jaw; 4 compound teeth on vomer; teeth on lower jaw multiserial, those on inner row slightly enlarged; lateral line short; and MVF 10-15-123. [Data adapted from Chen & Mok, 2001].

Remarks. No specimen from Taiwan is available for this study. Mok in Shen et al. (1993) first recorded the present species from Taiwan, but no voucher was mentioned. One specimen (NSYSU 2607, 207 mm TL) examined by Chen & Mok (2001) has only 123 total vertebrae, less than 130–131 provided by Robins & Robins (1989). However, we could not locate this specimen. More investigations are needed of the population in Taiwan.

Dysomma longirostrum Chen & Mok, 2001:79 (type locality: Nan-fang-ao, NE Taiwan). Ho & Shao, 2011:22.

Specimens examined. Holotype: NSYU 2732 (196), Nan-fang-ao fish market, NE Taiwan, bottom trawl, 100–150 m, 12 Sep. 1992, coll. Y.- Y. Chen.

Other locality. MNHN 2003-1515 (1, 285), R/V Alis, stn. CP8, 24°54'S, 168°21'E, Norfolk Ridge, New Caledonia, Coral Sea, 540 m, 11 Aug. 1999.

Diagnosis. Pectoral fin present; origin of dorsal fin above tip of pectoral fin, predorsal length 17.9–18.6% TL; no intermaxillary teeth; snout very long, its length 25.7–32.1% HL; jaw long and slender, upper jaw length 42.0– 52.1% HL; anus posterior, far behind pectoral fin, preanal length 24.0–24.3% TL; trunk moderately long, trunk length 9.7–10.3% TL; multiple rows of teeth on upper jaw; 5 compound teeth on vomer; multiple rows of small teeth on lower jaw, those on inner row larger than the rest; head pores: SO 5, IO 8 (2 between nostrils, 2 below eye, 4 behind eye), M 7, POP 2, AD 1, ST 0, F 1; lateral-line pores: predorsal 11, prepectoral 3–6, preanal 20, total ca. 77 or ca. 96, the last at 2/3 HL before caudal fin; MVF 14-24-130 (holotype only). Body uniformly brown when preserved. [Data adapted from Chen & Mok, 2001 and based on present study].

Remarks. One additional specimen was found in the MNHN collection that represents the second record of the species, in New Caledonia.

Dysomma longirostrum is the only member with four head pores behind the eye and two POP pores among all congeners. There is one frontal pore in the holotype whereas the MNHN specimen has none. The count of total lateral-line pores is not accurate because the posterior portion of the lateral line (behind anus) is broken into small canals, each canal connects two pores. These canals are not evenly spaced and sometimes have additional pores in the space between two canals. However, this may be used as a diagnostic character because the other congeners examined in the present work all have a continuous lateral line.

Notes

Published as part of Ho, Hsuan-Ching, Smith, David G. & Tighe, Kenneth A., 2015, Review of the arrowtooth eel genera Dysomma and Dysommina in Taiwan, with the description of a new species (Anguilliformes: Synaphobranchidae: Ilyophinae), pp. 86-104 in Zootaxa 4060 (1) on pages 94-96, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4060.1.12, http://zenodo.org/record/237500

Files

Files (3.7 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:14405782621d15af724276c8d4aeb818
3.7 kB Download

System files (29.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:2ed4a23de80789f245caa3a3029d4dea
29.3 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Curculionidae
Genus
Dysomma
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Coleoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Robins & Robins
Species
goslinei
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Dysomma goslinei Robins, 1976 sec. Ho, Smith & Tighe, 2015

References

  • Robins, C. H. & Robins, C. R. (1976) New genera and species of dysommine and synaphobranchine eels (Synaphobranchidae) with an analysis of the Dysomminae. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 127, 249 - 280.
  • Robins, C. H. & Robins, C. R. (1989) Family Synaphobranchidae. In: Bohlke, E. B. (Ed.), Fishes of the Western North Atlantic. Memoirs of the Sears Foundation for Marine Research, 1 (Part 9), 207 - 253.
  • Smith, D. G. (1999) Synaphobranchidae. In: Carpenter, K. E. & Niem, V. H. (Eds.), FAO Species Identification Guide for Fishery Purposes. The Living Marine Resources of the Western Central Pacific. Volume 3. Batoid fishes, chimeras and bony fishes part 1 (Elopidae to Linophrynidae). FAO, Rome, pp. 1658 - 1661.
  • Chen, Y. - Y. & Mok, H. - K. (2001) A new synaphobranchid eel, Dysomma longirostrum (Anguilliformes: Synaphobranchidae), from the northeastern coast of Taiwan. Zoological Studies, 40 (2), 79 - 83.
  • Ho, H. - C. & Shao, K. - T. (2011) Annotated checklist and type catalog of fish genera and species described from Taiwan. Zootaxa, 2957, 1 - 74.