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
Genus
Coryphaenoides
Gunnerus, 1874
DISTINGUISHING
FEATURES
.—
BR
6. Spinous second ray of 1D serrated along leading edge. Anus usually immediately before anal fin. No light organ.
REMARKS
.—
Coryphaenoides
is the second largest genus of
Macrouridae
, with more than 60 species currently recognized, only four of which are so far known from
Taiwan
. Six or seven subgenera continue to be recognized, some as full genera, but the circumscription of each of these has not been based on adequate phylogenetic analyses, although some attempts have been made using very limited numbers of species (e.g., Wilson et al. 1991;
Wilson 1994
), Wilson and Attia (2003) using DNA sequencing, peptide mapping of lactate dehydrogenase, and protein electrophoresis; and Rao-Varón and Ortí (2009) using nuclear and mitochondrial DNA sequences. Most of the species appear to have their primary depth range in mid-continental-slope depths, but many occur at lower-slope depths; a few are primarily found on the continental rise at depths of
2000–4000 m
, and the deepest-living grenadier,
C. yaquinae
Iwamoto and Stein, 1974
, has been captured in abyssal depths below
6000 m
. That species and
C. armatus
(Hector, 1874)
can be expected in
Taiwan
waters deeper than about
4000 m
, and other
Coryphaenoides
species
are likely to be found when depths greater than
2000 m
are more thoroughly sampled. As might be expected from fishes of great depths, many of the species are known from widely separated areas throughout the world oceans. A few of the larger members of this genus are of some commercial importance. The Roundnose grenadier (
C. rupestris
) of the North Atlantic has long been targeted by commercial fishermen and some stocks have become severely depleted. The Pacific grenadier (
Coryphaenoides acrolepis
) is the target of a very limited fishery off northern California.