Published March 28, 2025 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Sciaena radians

  • 1. South Carolina State Museum, 301 Gervais Street, Columbia, South Carolina 29021, USA.
  • 2. McWane Science Center, 200 19 Street North, Birmingham, Alabama 35203, USA.
  • 3. University of Louisiana at Monroe, Monroe, Louisiana 71209, USA.
  • 4. Office of Geology, Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, 700 North State Street, Jackson, Mississippi 39202, USA.
  • 5. Mississippi Museum of Natural Science, 2148 Riverside Drive, Jackson, Mississippi 39202, USA.

Description

Sciaena? radians (Koken, 1888)

Fig. 26 BB–CC

Otolithus (Sciaenidarum) radians Koken, 1888: 280.

Material examined

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA – Mississippi • 3 sagittae; Catahoula Formation; MMNS VP-8934, MMNS VP-12076 (Fig. 26 BB–CC), SC 2013.28.763.

Description

The outline of the sagitta is somewhat rectangular (sensu Smale et al. 1995), but the anterior, dorsal, and ventral margins are slightly convex and rounded to various degrees (Fig. 26 BB). The margins are typically smooth, and there is a highly characteristic inframedian tip on the posterior margin. The inner face is moderately convex (Fig. 26 CC) and characterized by a very large and prominent heterosulcoid-type sulcus. The ostium is noticeably large in its length and height. The ostium extends from near the anterodorsal margin well into the ventral field and is largest at the posterior portion. The ventral margin of the ostium curves distinctly upward toward the anterior margin and is subparallel to the anteroventral margin. The posteroventral portion of the ostium extends conspicuously underneath the cauda, especially on larger specimens. The height of the cauda is about 30% of the height of the ostium. The cauda has a characteristic horizontal and downturned component. The horizontal and downturned portions are of similar length, but the downturned portion is usually slightly longer on the larger specimens (Nolf 2003: pl. 4 figs 1–3). The outer face becomes somewhat more irregular on larger specimens. The outer face is nearly flat on small specimens but is more convex on larger specimens, although it is not nearly as convex as the inner face.

Remarks

Koken (1888) originally named Otolithus (Sciaenidarum) gemma based on specimens labeled only as “Vicksburg” from Mississippi, USA. Unfortunately, Koken’s type suite actually contained three different species, including Sciaena? radians, S.? pseudoradians, and Aplodinotus gemma (see discussion in Nolf 2003). Only three specimens of Sciaena? radians were recovered from the Catahoula Formation (less than 1% of the total specimens), and the species is the least common of the sciaenids within the otolith assemblage. Although “ S.? ” radians is widespread in the Gulf Coastal Plain and is known from many Oligocene formations in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama (Nolf 2003, 2013; Stringer & Worley 2003; Worley 2004; Stringer et al. 2020c), the species is similarly rare in those assemblages.

Notes

Published as part of Cicimurri, David J., Ebersole, Jun A., Stringer, Gary L., Starnes, James E. & Phillips, George E., 2025, Late Oligocene fishes (Chondrichthyes and Osteichthyes) from the Catahoula Formation in Wayne County, Mississippi, USA, pp. 1-131 in European Journal of Taxonomy 984 (1) on pages 93-94, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2025.984.2851, http://zenodo.org/record/15126034

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
MMNS , SC
Material sample ID
2013.28.763 , VP-12076 , VP-8934
Scientific name authorship
Koken
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Order
Perciformes
Family
Sciaenidae
Genus
Sciaena
Species
radians
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Sciaena radians (Koken, 1888) sec. Cicimurri, Ebersole, Stringer, Starnes & Phillips, 2025

References

  • Koken E. 1888. Neue Untersuchungen an tertiaren Fisch-Otolithen. Zeitschrift der deutschen geologischen Gesellschaft 40: 274-305.
  • Smale M., Watson G. & Hecht T. 1995. Otolith atlas of southern African marine fishes. Ichthyological Monographs of the J. L. B. Smith Institute of Ichthyology 1: 1-253.
  • Nolf D. 2003. Revision of the American otolith-based fish species described by Koken in 1888. Louisiana Geological Survey Geological Pamphlet 12: 1-19.
  • Nolf D. 2013. The Diversity of Fish Otoliths, Past and Present. Monographs in Natural Sciences. Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels.
  • Stringer G. L. & Worley L. 2003. Implications of recently discovered marine Oligocene vertebrates from the Rosefield Formation of Louisiana. Abstracts with Programs, 106 th Annual Meeing of the Texas Academy of Science, Nacogdoches, Texas, Feb. 27 - Mar. 1, 2003: 67.
  • Worley L. E. 2004. Paleoecologic and Evolutionary Implications of Bony and Cartilaginous Fishes from Oligocene Sites of the Rosefield Formation in Northwestern Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. M. Sc. thesis, University of Louisiana at Monroe.
  • Stringer G. L., Starnes J. E., Leard J. & Puckett M. 2020 c. Taphonomic and paleoecologic considerations of a phenomenal abundance of teleostean otoliths in the Glendon Limestone (Oligocene, Rupelian), Brandon, Mississippi. Journal of the Mississippi Academy of Sciences 65 (1): 101. https://doi.org/10.24425/agp.2020.134561