Notes on batoid fishes of the Socotra Archipelago (north-western Indian Ocean) with four new records
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
Senckenberg oesearch fns ṫẚṫuṫe and Museum of ka ṫure (SMc) I Sec ṫẚon fch ṫhyology & Senckenberg B ẚodẚversẚṫy and Cl ẚmaṫe oesearch Cen ṫre (SB ẚh-c) I B ẚogeography-Senckenberganlage 2 RI SMP 2 R crankfur ṫ am Ma ẚnI GermanyK & S ṫaṫẚon of ka ṫuralẚsṫsI OmskI ouss ẚaK ẚc 18 T 19 S @ yandexKru; h ṫṫps: LLorc ẚdKorgL 0000 - 0002 - 8679 - 9735
Author
Zajonz, Uwe
Senckenberg oesearch fns ṫẚṫuṫe and Museum of ka ṫure (SMc) I Sec ṫẚon fch ṫhyology & Senckenberg B ẚodẚversẚṫy and Cl ẚmaṫe oesearch Cen ṫre (SB ẚh-c) I B ẚogeography-Senckenberganlage 2 RI SMP 2 R crankfur ṫ am Ma ẚnI GermanyK
Author
Saeed, Fouad N.
Senckenberg oesearch fns ṫẚṫuṫe and Museum of ka ṫure (SMc) I Sec ṫẚon fch ṫhyology & Senckenberg B ẚodẚversẚṫy and Cl ẚmaṫe oesearch Cen ṫre (SB ẚh-c) I B ẚogeography-Senckenberganlage 2 RI SMP 2 R crankfur ṫ am Ma ẚnI GermanyK
Author
Weigmann, Simon
blasmo-iabI blasmobranch oesearch iabora ṫoryI eamburgI GermanyK s ẚmonKweẚgmann @ elasmo-labKde;
text
Zootaxa
2021
4951
3
511
528
journal article
7385
10.11646/zootaxa.4951.3.5
caee27e5-0786-4e95-84fb-ee5394fa79e3
1175-5326
4668365
9BEB98F0-DEA7-4131-8E37-DFC4D5DFCB7B
Rhynchobatus australiae
Whitley, 1939
Bottlenose wedgefish
Figs. 5A & B
,
6A
ohynchobaṫus djẚddensẚs ausṫralẚae
Whitley, 1939: 245
;
holotype
: AMS IA.4959; type locality:
New South Wales
,
Australia
.
Material examined:
SMF
uncatalogued [tissue sample SOC19-447], female,
73.5 cm
TL,
Socotra Island
, fish market in
Hadibo
,
10 April 2019
;
SMF
uncatalogued [tissue sample SOC19-448], male,
106.5 cm
TL,
Socotra Island
,
Ras Hawlaf
,
11 April 2019
.
Distinctive characters:
ohynchobaṫus ausṫralẚae
is characterised by having a long and pointed, bottle-shaped snout that is slightly constricted near tip; posterior tip of pectoral fins ending before pelvic fins; no prominent ridges on head and body; spiracle with two folds; upper caudal-fin lobe longer than the lower one (
Weigmann 2011
; Last
eṫ al
. 2016b;
Jabado 2019
).
Colouraṫẚon
: Olivaceous to grey-brown dorsally; head without transverse black bands between eye and spiracles; side of body, posterior half of pectoral fins and sometimes distal third of pelvic fins with sparse coverage of small white spots, which do not extent posteriorly behind rear tip of first dorsal fin; black pectoral marking surrounded by a distinctive pattern of white spots (three or four spots around the marking plus one or two in front of it). Large individuals usually entirely dark, with white spots and pectoral marking hardly discernible (Last
eṫ al
. 2016b). Ventral surface almost uniformly white; underside of snout whitish in the middle, with violet hue laterally (
Fig. 6A
).
FIGURE 4.
ohẚna ancylosṫoma
, fresh colouration, female, 225 cm TL, Abd al-Kuri Island, Socotra Archipelago.
A:
dorsal view;
B:
head close-up. Photos by S.V. Bogorodsky & U. Zajonz.
FIGURE 5.
ohynchobaṫus
spp., dorsal view, fresh colouration.
A:
oK ausṫralẚae
, SMF uncatalogued, female, 73.5 cm TL, fish market in Hadibo, Socotra Island;
B:
oK ausṫralẚae
, SMF uncatalogued, male, 106.5 cm TL, Ras Hawlaf, Socotra Island;
C:
oK djẚddensẚs
, female, 130 cm TL, Socotra Island;
D:
oK laevẚs
, SMF uncatalogued, female, 115 cm TL, Qatar, the Gulf. Photos by S.V. Bogorodsky & U. Zajonz (A, B and D), R. Bonfil (C).
Distribution:
Known from the
Socotra
Archipelago southward to
Tanzania
, eastward to eastern
Australia
, the
Philippines
and
Papua New Guinea
. The presence off
Tanzania
is confirmed by a specimen that nested within the same genetic lineage as
oK ausṫralẚae
(unpublished data). Last
eṫ al
. (2016b) included
Mozambique
in the distribution range of the species but the respective specimen from off
Mozambique
is referred to as
oK djẚddensẚs
by Giles
eṫ al
. (2016).
Remarks:
Giles
eṫ al
. (2016) provided comprehensive data on the genetic structure and phenotypic variation within
oK ausṫralẚae
but no specimens from the Arabian region were examined in their study. Jabado
eṫ al
. (2017) summarized the conservation status of sharks, rays and chimaeras in the Arabian region and included three species of
ohynchobaṫus
:
oK ausṫralẚae
,
oK djẚddensẚs
(
Forsskål, 1775
) and
oK laevẚs
(
Bloch & Schneider, 1801
). Subsequently, Jabado (2018) listed those three species as present in the Gulf and
Oman
waters; whereby both publications lack evidence for the presence of
oK ausṫralẚae
in the region. So far, only one confirmed record of the species from the south-eastern part of the Arabian Sea existed based on two specimens landed at
Cochin
Fisheries Harbour,
Kerala
(Bineesh
eṫ al
. 2014).
Jabado (2019)
provided an illustrated guide for the identification of all known species of
Rhinidae
based on fresh specimens and fins. She noted the misidentification of species of the genus as a common problem for fisheries management and accurate identification as being critical for conservation programs.
ohynchobaṫus djẚddensẚs
, described from the Red Sea, ranges southward to
South Africa
, northward to the Gulf and into the north-eastern part of the Arabian Sea (Last
eṫ al
. 2016b; Kizhakudan
eṫ al
. 2018), with positive records in the region from the Red Sea, south coast of
Yemen
(
Bonfil & Abdallah 2004
),
Oman
(Henderson
eṫ alK
2015) and the Gulf (Almojil
eṫ al
. 2015; Henderson
eṫ al
. 2015).
Kemp (1998)
listed
oK djẚddensẚs
from the
Socotra
Archipelago, yet without sample or photographic evidence.
Bonfil & Abdallah (2004)
subsequently included a photograph taken from off
Socotra Island
in their FAO Guide (Ramon Bonfil, personal communication), confirming its occurrence there.
ohynchobaṫus laevẚs
is reported in the region from off
Oman
(Randall 1995 as
oK djẚddensẚs
; Henderson
eṫ al
. 2015), the Gulf (Almojil
eṫ al
. 2015; Henderson
eṫ al
. 2015), and
Pakistan
(Psomadakis
eṫ al
. 2015).
Spaet & Berumen (2015)
reported the presence of two species of
ohynchobaṫus
in the Red Sea, yet without providing photographs or descriptions. Until now, no evidence for the occurrence of
oK ausṫralẚae
in the Arabian region had been provided.
ohynchobaṫus djẚddensẚs
differs from other species by having a large black, circular pectoral marking about as large as eye (may be indistinct or absent in adults), a dense pattern of white spots (sometimes also rings) on the dorsal surface, which do not or slightly extend forward of pectoral markings on mid-disc, absence of white spots on the pelvic fins, and prominent mask-like markings between the eyes (Last
eṫ al
. 2016b;
Jabado 2019
) (
Fig. 5C
).
ohynchobaṫus laevẚs
differs from its congeners by having a relatively broad snout, rows of small white spots on the dorsal surface of body and tail, spots beginning distinctly behind black pectoral markings (usually the dorsal surface anterior to first dorsal-fin origin remains unspotted), a pectoral marking that usually is a black ocellus with pale brown centre surrounded by 5–7 small white spots, and a blackish underside of snout (Last
eṫ al
. 2016b;
Jabado 2019
) (
Figs. 5D
&
6B
).
FIGURE 6.
ohynchobaṫus
spp., underside of snout.
A:
oK ausṫralẚae
, SMF uncatalogued, male, 106.5 cm TL, Ras Hawlaf, Socotra Island;
B:
oK laevẚs
, SMF uncatalogued, female, 115 cm TL, Qatar, the Gulf. Photos by S.V. Bogorodsky & U. Zajonz.
Both examined specimens match well the descriptions of
ohynchobaṫus ausṫralẚae
provided by
Weigmann (2011)
and Last
eṫ al
. (2016b), representing the first confirmed record for the Arabian region. Elsewhere, the species typically lives on sedimentary substrata of shallow lagoons and coastal reef areas at depths of
0–60 m
(
Weigmann 2016
). The female was taken from the fish market in Hadibo without precise collection data on locality and habitat, while the male was caught by two of the authors (SVB and FNS) in a large lagoon with silty sand bottom in an area mixed with small stones and sea weeds at a depth of
4–5 m
in Ras Hawlaf bay, northern part of
Socotra Island
. The species is included as critically endangered in IUCN Red List Assessments and urgently requires conservation management (Kyne
eṫ al
. 2019b).