A review of the blennioid fish family Tripterygiidae (Perciformes) in the Red Sea, with description of Enneapterygius qirmiz, and reinstatement of Enneapterygius altipinnis Clark, 1980
Author
Holleman, Wouter
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3152
36
60
journal article
45708
10.5281/zenodo.279573
7359830e-3896-4dc8-91bc-1c15c4ee2993
1175-5326
279573
Genus
Enneapterygius
Rüppell, 1835
Enneapterygius
Rüppell, 1835
: 2
;
type
species
Enneapterygius pusillus
Rüppell, 1835
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis.
Small fishes with fusiform bodies, generally less than
25 mm
SL in the Western Indian Ocean. First dorsal fin with III spines, second with XI–XIV spines, third with 8–11 simple rays, except for last which is divided to its base; anal fin with a single short spine and 15–22 simple rays, except for the last which is divided to its base; pelvic fins with one short, hidden spine and two simple rays, often partially joined by membrane. LL with an anterior section of pored scales and a posterior section of scales with a notch in the posterior margin, starting from 1–2 scale rows below end of pored section and continuing to base of caudal fin. Head without scales; nape scaled, partially scaled or naked, belly naked in most species. Supratemporal sensory canal either an open ‘C’-shape, ‘U’- shape, or an open ‘U’-shape, curving around the first dorsal-fin spine (see figure in Key above). Orbital and anterior nasal cirri simple, the nasal cirrus on the posterior edge of a short tube. Teeth fixed, conical and slightly recurved, larger in front; vomer with a single row of teeth, palatines without. Currently 61 recognised species, nine species in the Red Sea.