Halaelurus maculosus n. sp. and H. sellus n. sp., two new species of catshark (Carcharhiniformes: Scyliorhinidae) from the Indo-West Pacific.
Author
William T. White
Author
Peter R. Last
Author
John D. Stevens
text
Zootaxa
2007
1639
1
21
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:84152FF4-E49B-4049-A9FC-E558F585D210
journal article
z01639p001
[[ Genus
Halaelurus Gill
]]
The genus
Halaelurus
, proposed by Gill (1862) for
Scyllium buergeri
Mueller
& Henle, 1838
, consists of 5 described species:
H. boesemani Springer & D’Aubrey, 1972
,
H. buergeri
Mueller
& Henle, 1838
,
H. lineatus Bass, D'Aubrey & Kistnasamy, 1975
,
H. natalensis (Regan, 1904)
and
H. quagga (Alcock, 1899)
(Compagno, 1988; Compagno et al., 2005). The closely related genus
Bythaelurus Compagno, 1988
, previously a subgenus of
Halaelurus
, comprises 7 described species:
B. alcocki (Garman, 1913)
,
B. canescens (
Guenther
, 1878)
,
B. clevai (
Seret
, 1987)
,
B. dawsoni (Springer, 1971)
,
B. hispidus (Alcock, 1891)
,
B. immaculatus (Chu & Meng in Chu et al., 1982)
and
B. lutarius (Springer & D’Aubrey, 1972)
. Members of the genus
Bythaelurus
differ from species of
Halaelurus
in having eyes not noticeably elevated on head vs. noticeably elevated on dorsal surface of head; gill slits not elevated above lateral head margin vs. elevated above lateral head margin; body soft with thin skin vs. body firm with thick skin; precaudal tail about 0.8-0.9 of precloacal length vs. 0.5-0.6 of precloacal length (Compagno, 1988). Representatives of the genus
Bythaelurus
are typically uniformly dark in coloration and have a scattered distribution in upper to lower slope regions of the Eastern Pacific and Indian Ocean, with a single species occurring in the Western Pacific. Members of the genus
Halaelurus
have an attractive colour pattern and occur essentially in the Indo-West Pacific, from South Africa to Japan and Australia, in insular and continental shelf regions (Compagno, 1988; Compagno et al., 2005).
Recent market surveys in eastern Indonesia produced a large collection of scyliorhinid catsharks, along with many other chondrichthyans. Included in this material were 28 individuals of a catshark that was originally identified tentatively as
Halaelurus buergeri
. Comparison of these Indonesian
Halaelurus
with material from northwestern Australia revealed two new species that differ significantly from other currently recognised members of the genus. This paper provides descriptions of these new species.