Cirrhigaleus australis n. sp., a new Mandarin dogfish (Squaliformes: Squalidae) from the south-west Pacific.
Author
William T. White
Author
Peter R. Last
Author
John D. Stevens
text
Zootaxa
2007
1560
19
30
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0CACC616-279B-4996-9DCB-0B6B2A39C159
journal article
z01560p019
0CACC616-279B-4996-9DCB-0B6B2A39C159
[[ Genus
Cirrhigaleus Tanaka
]]
The genus
Cirrhigaleus
was proposed as a monotypic genus by Tanaka (1912) for a new dogfish,
C. barbifer
, from Japan. Soon after, Herre (1935) described another Mandarin dogfish
Phaenopogon barbulifer
, also based on Japanese material. Herre had overlooked Tanaka’s description but immediately synonymised his species with
C. barbifer
once he realised this oversight (Herre, 1936).
Cirrhigaleus
was synonymised with
Squalus
by Garman (1913), but was reinstated as a valid genus by Bigelow & Schroeder (1948, 1957).
Cirrhigaleus
is distinguishable from members of the closely related genus
Squalus
by its extremely elongated nasal barbels, similar dorsal fins, and absence of precaudal pits.
In 1973, Merrett described another distinctive dogfish,
Squalus asper
, from Aldabra in the western Indian Ocean. This species differed from other
Squalus
species in its possession of large dorsal fins of similar size, weak or absent precaudal pits, and a very short, broad head. Thus, at this stage, the only characteristic distinguishing
Cirrhigaleus
and
Squalus
was the extremely long nasal barbels of the former species. Although Bass et al. (1976) synonymised
Cirrhigaleus
with
Squalus
, Bass (1979) and Compagno (1984) retained
Squalus asper
and
Cirrhigaleus barbifer
in their respective genera, but noted their similarity. Cladistic analysis by Shirai(1992) reassigned
Squalus asper
in
Cirrhigaleus
, based largely on the similarity of their chondrocrania. Molecular studies of the family Squalidae may be required to assess the validity of this decision.
Cirrhigaleus barbifer
is thought to have a sporadic distribution in the Indo -West Pacific, from southeastern Japan (Tanaka, 1912; Nakabo, 2002), Taiwan (Shen, 1993), Bali and Lombok in Indonesia (White et al. 2006), Torres Islands in Vanuatu (Fourmanoir & Rivaton, 1979), southeastern Australia (Bass, 1979), and New Zealand (Garrick & Paul, 1971; Paulin et al., 1989). However, recent examination of
Cirrhigaleus
specimens from Australia and Indonesia revealed that there are at least two clearly separable species involved. This paper provides a description of the new
Cirrhigaleus
species from Australia and provides a comparison with Indonesian and Japanese specimens.