The catshark genus Scyliorhinus (Chondrichthyes: Carcharhiniformes: Scyliorhinidae): taxonomy, morphology and distribution
Author
Soares, Karla D. A.
Author
De, Marcelo R.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-05-07
4601
1
1
147
journal article
26917
10.11646/zootaxa.4601.1.1
20ab611b-e7f3-4b2d-b87a-1c91e0861597
1175-5326
2669727
8A695352-8382-458F-A86A-17A198F780CA
Scyliorhinus cabofriensis
Soares, Gomes & de Carvalho, 2016
(
Figs. 10A
,
11
)
Scyliorhinus
sp.
Nunan & Senna, 2007
: 167, figs. 1c, d (catalogue, outer shelf and continental slope of
Brazil
).
Scyliorhinus cabofriensis
Soares, Gomes & de Carvalho, 2016
: 503
–513, figs. 1–8 (original description,
type
locality:
Rio de Janeiro
,
Brazil
);
Rincón
et al
., 2017
: 95 (listed).
FIGURE 10.
Clasper skeleton of
Scyliorhinus
species distributed along the southwestern Atlantic; dorsal view of skeleton. A,
Scyliorhinus cabofriensis
, UERJ 1702, 468 mm TL; B,
S. haeckelii
, UERJ 2233.6, 449 mm TL; C,
S. ugoi
, UERJ 1725, 530 mm TL. end, endstyle; rd, dorsal marginal cartilage; rh, rhipidion; rv, ventral marginal cartilage; td, dorsal terminal cartilage; td2, dorsal terminal 2 cartilage; tv, ventral terminal cartilage; tv2, ventral terminal 2 cartilage. Modified from Soares
et al.
(2015, 2016). Scale bar = 5 mm.
FIGURE 11.
Map showing the geographic distribution of
Scyliorhinus cabofriensis
(yellow circles),
S. haeckelii
(green circles) and
S. ugoi
(blue circles) based on material examined in this study. Stars indicate the type localities of species.
Holotype
.
MNRJ 40730
, female,
395 mm
TL (
Cabo Frio
,
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
).
Paratypes
.
MCP
47874, female,
313 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
)
;
MCP
47875, female
325 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
)
;
MCP
47876, female,
276 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
MNRJ
40731, female,
285 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
MNRJ
40732, male,
420 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
MNRJ
40733, female,
281 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
MZUSP
37284, male,
393 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
UERJ
2042, female,
401 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
UERJ
2231.2, male,
454 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
);
UERJ
2231.4, female,
393 mm
TL (
Rio de Janeiro
, southeastern
Brazil
)
.
Additional material examined
.
12 specimens
(see Appendix).
Diagnosis
.
Scyliorhinus cabofriensis
differs from all congeners by presenting a color pattern composed of well-defined dark spots along the whole body, predominantly smaller than spiracles, and inconspicuous saddles (vs. dark spots absent in
S. capensis
,
S. comoroensis
,
S. hesperius
,
S. meadi
,
S. torazame
, and
S. torrei
; spots predominantly larger than the spiracle and inside the saddles or bordering them in
S. boa
,
S. cervigoni
,
S. duhamelii
,
S. garmani
,
S. haeckelii
,
S. stellaris
, and
S. ugoi
; reticulated pattern in
S. retifer
; saddles well defined and dark longitudinal stripe present in
S. canicula
). The following combination of characters, although less conspicuous, also helps distinguish this species: light spots smaller than spiracles present from the pectoral saddle and continuing posteriorly (vs. spots from the first dorsal fin in
S. haeckelii
); saddles without anteromedial and posteromedial projections (vs. projections present in
S. ugoi
); anterior nasal flap does not reach the upper lip (vs. nasal flap reaching the upper lip, sometimes covering it, in
S. canicula
, S,
cervigoni
,
S. comoroensis
,
S. duhamelii
,
S. garmani
, and
S. stellaris
); pelvic apron extending until at least 2/3 of the inner margin pelvic length (vs. extending for almost all the entire length in
S. canicula
,
S. capensis
,
S. duhamelii
,
S. torazame
, and
S. torrei
); clasper with cover rhipidion covered by dermal denticles (vs. denticles absent in
S. boa
,
S. cervigoni
and
S. retifer
); envelope absent (vs. present in
S. boa
,
S. haeckelii
,
S. retifer
, and
S. torrei
); terminal dermal cover smooth (vs. rough in
S. canicula
and
S. capensis
); groove present in the distal portion of the ventral terminal cartilage of clasper (vs. groove absent or poorly developed in
S. haeckelii
); terminal 3 cartilage absent (vs. present in
S. boa
,
S. canicula
,
S. capensis
,
S. retifer
,
S. torazame
, and
S. ugoi
); dorsal terminal 2 cartilage reduced and subtriangular (vs. elongated in
S. boa
,
S. canicula
,
S. comoroensis
,
S. duhamelii
,
S. retifer
,
S. stellaris
,
S. torazame
, and
S. torrei
); ventral terminal 2 cartilage corresponding to 1/4 of ventral terminal cartilage (vs. 1/
3 in
S. haeckelii
); interdorsal space greater than anal base (vs. shorter or similar to the anal base in
S. canicula
,
S. capensis
,
S. cervigoni
,
S. comoroensis
,
S. duhamelii
,
S. garmani
,
S. stellaris
, and
S. torazame
); counts of monospondylous vertebra 37–39 (vs.
44–46 in
S. capensis
;
40–45 in
S. cervigoni
;
48 in
S. garmani
;
46–48 in
S. meadi
;
43–47 in
S. stellaris
;
32–37 in
S. torazame
;
30–35 in
S. torrei
); adult males at
393 mm
TL and females at
420 mm
TL (vs. sizes greater than
450 mm
TL in
S. capensis
,
S. cervigoni
,
S. meadi
,
S. stellaris
, and
S. ugoi
;
269 mm
and
294 mm
, respectively, in
S. torrei
).
Etymology
. The specific name ‘cabofriensis’ refers to its
type
and only known locality, off
Cabo
Frio in northeastern
Rio
de Janeiro
state.
Remarks.
Soares
et al.
(2016)
described the clasper of
S. cabofriensis
with an accessory dorsal marginal cartilage (RD2), which would support the rhipidion (p. 509–510, figs. 5, 6). In this study, this structure is reidentified as a terminal dorsal 2 cartilage (
Fig. 8A
), following
Jungersen (1899)
and Compagno (1988a). Conservation status unknown.