Synopsis of the Grenadier Fishes (Gadiformes; Teleostei) of Taiwan
Author
Iwamoto, Tomio
Section of Ichthyology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA;
Author
Nakayama, Naohide
Laboratory of Marine Biology, Faculty of Science, Kochi University, 2 - 5 - 1 Akebono-cho, Kochi, 780 - 8073, Japan;
Author
Shao, Kwang-Tsao
Research Center for Biodiversity, Academia Sinica No. 128, Sec. 2, Academia Road, Nankang, Taipei 115, Taiwan;
Author
Table, Hsuan-Ching Ho
text
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences
2015
2015-04-15
62
3
31
126
journal article
299670
10.5281/zenodo.11512126
522b8de7-880d-40ca-803e-aa5a3a05c5f6
0068-547X
11512126
Kuronezumia dara
(Gilbert and Hubbs, 1916)
Figure 14
.
Lionurus darus
Gilbert and Hubbs, 1916:197–199
, pl. 10, fig. 1 (
holotype
,
132 mm
TL,
USNM 76867
;
Suruga Gulf
,
Japan
, 35°06ʹN,
138°40ʹ10ʺE
, 197 fm [
360 m
]).
Nezumia darus
:
Okamura, 1970:101–102
(description from Gilbert and Hubbs, 1916).— Okamura
in
Okamura et al., 1982:161
, 349, fig. 95 (p. 160) (
2 spec.
,
130–144 mm
TL; Tosa Bay,
355–605 m
).— Okamura
in
Masuda et al., 1984:95
, fig. 81–J (compiled).— Okamura
in
Okamura and Kitajima, 1984:217, 363, fig. 153 (p. 216) (
2 spec.
,
220–318 mm
TL; East
China
Sea [Okinawa Trough],
560–692 m
).—
Nakabo, 2002:424
(compiled).
Kuronezumia darus
:
Shao et al., 2008
: table 2 (
1 spec.
,
Taiwan
[
SWT
],
280–452 m
; first record from Taiwan)
.
Kuronezumia dara
:
Shcherbachev et al., 1992:100–101
(mentioned, no additional specimens).
MATERIAL
EXAMINED
(
1 spec.
).—
SWT
:
ASIZP 65514
(1, 482 TL), CD 140, 280–
452 m
.
Other
specimens:
Japan
:
BSKU 27666
(1, 49.8 HL, 255+ TL), 26326 (1, 34.6 HL, 209+ TL), 44828 (1, 42.4 HL, 218+ TL), 45036 (60.0 HL, 376+ TL);
HUMZ
uncat. (1, 22.0 HL, 138+ TL)
.
DISTINGUISHING
FEATURES
.— 1D II, 9–10; P i21–i23;
V
10–12, usually11; GR-I (outer/inner) 0+(1–8) / 2+(8–9), GR-II 1+(7–8) / 1+(7–9); scale rows below 1D origin 12–15, below 2D origin 10.5–11.0; below mid-base 1D 8.5–10; over distance equal to pre-1D 35–42. Snout 24–30% HL; preoral length 15–19%; internasal width 18–19; orbit 25–33%; interorbital 24–25; postorbital length 44–49%; orbit to angle of preopercle 36–42%; upper jaw 30–35%; barbel 20–27%; length outer gill slit 16–20%; greatest body depth 85–97%; pre-A length 139–152%; isthmus to A 57–79%; 1D height 97–98% (
3 spec.
); 1D base length 28–31; 1D-2D interspace 23–41%; length outer
V
ray 68–87%. Head compressed, much deeper than wide; snout low, bluntly rounded, scarcely protruding beyond large mouth, lacking stout spinous tubercle at tip; upper jaw extends posteriorly about to below mid-orbit. Barbel moderately long, slender, about 0.5–0.8 of orbit. Scales small, densely covered with slender, conical spinules giving velvety feel to body surfaces; scale ridges on head not especially developed, head contours smoothly rounded. Color medium brown to swarthy, juveniles blackish overall, fins dark (usually black). A moderately large species, probably attaining about
500 mm
TL; the current
Taiwan
specimen is the largest recorded.
DISTRIBUTION
.—
Pacific
coast of s.
Japan
in
360–692 m
and
SCS
off
Taiwan
in
280–452 m
.
REMARKS
.—
Shao et al. (2008)
first recorded the species from
Taiwan
and the South
China
Sea based on the
ASIZP
specimen.
Kuronezumia dara
is quite similar in many respects to
K. bubonis
Iwamoto, 1974
, which has been recorded from the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans, including the South
China
Sea off
Vietnam
(
Shcherbachev et al. 1992:99–100
). A notable difference is the tubercular swelling housing the light organ in
K. bubonis
, which is absent in
K. dara
.
FIGURE
14.
Xuronezumia dara
(Gilbert and Hubbs, 1916)
. ASIZP 65514, 482 mm TL. A. lateral view.
B. dorsal view.
The species-group name
darus
has been used by most Japanese authors even after the name had been transferred to the genus
Kuronezumia
by
Shcherbachev et al. (1992)
, to which transfer those Japanese authors agree. Gilbert and Hubbs (1916) originally described the species in the masculine genus
Lionurus
, taking the Japanese term
dara
and latinizing it to
darus
to agree in gender with the genus name. When the specific name was combined with the feminine genus
Kuronezumia
, under Article 31.2 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature the “species-group name, if it is or ends in a Latin or latinized adjective or participle in the nominative singular, must agree in gender with the generic name with which it is at any time combined” (
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1999:38
). Thus, the masculine species-group name
darus
must be changed to the feminine
dara
.