Published August 22, 2023 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Neobythites pako Uiblein & Nielsen 2023, n. sp.

  • 1. Institute of Marine Research, P. O. Box 1870 Nordnes, N- 5817 Bergen, Norway. Corresponding author; & National Research Foundation - South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, Makhanda / Grahamstown, South Africa & Vietnam National Museum of Nature, Hanoi, Vietnam
  • 2. Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Description

Neobythites pako n. sp.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: B3E4CA7D-F0FD-41EF-A884-451331786136

Figures 3, 6, 7; Tables 1, 5, 6

Holotype. MNHN 2006-0337, 165 mm SL, Solomon Sea, 8°6′25.2″S, 157°23′2.4″E, Salomon 2 cruise, R / V Alis, st. CP 2286, 248– 253 m depth, 6 Nov. 2004.

Diagnosis. Hind margin of preopercle with very short spine; dorsal-fin rays 92; anal-fin rays 77; pectoral-fin rays 28; precaudal vertebrae 13; total vertebrae 56; pseudobranchial filaments 2; long rakers on anterior gill arch 10; head length 22% SL; pelvic-fin length 14% SL, fins not reaching anus; orbit length 4.5% SL and 21% HL; longest gill filament 1.9% SL and 8.8% HL; dorsal fin with central ocellus placed well behind vertical line through anus, spot distance 46% SL and spot covers 7 dorsal-fin rays, not extending ventrally onto body; ocellus spot dark brown; posterior two-thirds of anal fin black; no vertical bars on body; otolith length 4.8% SL, sulcus length 3.8% SL, and ostium height 17% sulcus length and 25% ostium length.

Description. The principal meristic and morphometric characters are shown in Table 5. Elongate fish with complete lateral line; head and body covered by deciduous, cycloid scales; origin of dorsal fin above middle of pectoral fin; origin of anal fin slightly in front of midpoint of fish; snout blunt and equal in length to diameter of eye window; very short spine on hind margin of preopercle; opercular spine short and pointed; anterior gill arch on both sides with 4 short and 2 long rakers on upper branch, one long raker at angle, and 7 long and 6–8 short rakers on lower branch; longest filaments on anterior gill arch 8.8% HL and longest raker on anterior gill arch 10% HL.

+ tail broken, only data for anterior body part and measurements not related to Sl available for larger specimen.

Sagittal otolith (Fig. 3E). Otolith peanut-shaped, ventrally rounded, dorsally and anteriorly flattened, posteriorly blunt, its depth 1.7 times in its length; sulcus large, 1.3 times in otolith length; ostium 1.5 times in sulcus length; ostium depth 5.4 times in sulcus length and 3.6 times in ostium length.

Dentition. Premaxillaries, palatines, and dentaries with many small, pointed, close-set teeth in irregular rows; vomer boomerang-shaped with many, pointed teeth; two median basibranchial tooth patches, anterior one long and narrow and posterior one small and circular.

Axial skeleton. Precaudal vertebrae 13, all with pointed tip; anterior neural spine almost half length of second spine; neural spines on vertebrae 1–9 somewhat depressed, parapophyses present on vertebrae 8–13, pleural ribs on vertebrae 3–13 and epipleural ribs indistinct; basis of neural spines 4–13 enlarged.

Colour. Preserved fish (Fig. 6A). Body and head of preserved HT rather uniformly pale brown, slightly darker dorsally and in snout region, gill cover anteriorly gray brown, posteriorly pale, lateral line indistinct, abdomen pale gray anterior of anus; single ocellus placed well behind vertical line through anus at body midpoint, central-ocellus spot dark brown, slightly larger than orbit diameter, covering 7 dorsal-fin rays, not extending onto body below dorsal fin, ocellus ring pale, rather indistinct on folded fin, becoming more distinct when fin is raised; dorsal fin anterior and behind ocellus pale gray brownish, pigmentation becoming somewhat more intense on posterior third towards caudal fin; anal fin almost entirely covered with continuous dark brown stripe behind vertical line through posterior ocellus spot edge; pelvic and pectoral fins hyaline.

Etymology. The new species name “ pako ” is used as a noun in apposition and honours the son of the first author, Francisco “Pako” Uiblein.

Distribution and size. Only known from the HT (165 mm SL), caught in bottom trawl in eastern Solomon Sea at 248–253 m depth.

Notes

Published as part of Uiblein, Franz & Nielsen, Jørgen G., 2023, Five new ocellus-bearing species of the cusk-eel genus Neobythites (Ophidiidae, Ophidiiformes) from the West Pacific, with establishment of three new species groups, pp. 179-205 in Zootaxa 5336 (2) on pages 197-201, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5336.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/8272417

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
R, V
Event date
2004-11-06
Family
Ophidiidae
Genus
Neobythites
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
MNHN 2006-0337
Order
Ophidiiformes
Phylum
Chordata
Scientific name authorship
Uiblein & Nielsen
Species
pako
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2004-11-06
Taxonomic concept label
Neobythites pako Uiblein & Nielsen, 2023

References

  • Uiblein F. & Nielsen J. G. (2018) Review of the steatiticus species group of the cuskeel genus Neobythites (Ophidiidae) from the Indo-Pacific, with description of two new species. Zootaxa, 4387 (1), 157 - 173. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4387.1.7
  • Nielsen, J. G., Uiblein, F. & Mincarone, M. M. (2009) Ocellus-bearing Neobythites species (Teleostei: Ophidiidae) from the West Atlantic with description of a new species. Zootaxa, 2228 (1), 57 - 68. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 2228.1.4