A New Species of the Ceratioid Anglerfish Genus Lasiognathus Regan (Lophiiformes: Oneirodidae) from the Northern Gulf of Mexico
Author
Theodore W. Pietsch
Author
Tracey T. Sutton
text
Copeia
2015
103
2
429
432
journal article
10.1643/Ci-14-181
a8aba141-9159-4d8c-9b5d-928358570431
269572
Lasiognathus
dinema
,
new specIes
Figures
1–3
Holotype
.—
UW
152603
, female,
95 mm
,
NOAA
FRV
Pisces
, Station B
249
,
DD
2
, northern Gulf of
Mexico
,
27.5
°N
,
88.5
°W
, Irish Herring Trawl, depth of collection
0–
1271
m
, bottom depth
2104
m
,
26
June
2011
(
Fig.
2
A).
Paratypes
.—
UW
152604
, female,
30 mm
, R/V
Meg Skansi
, Station SW
6
D-net
2
, northern Gulf of
Mexico
,
27.0°N
,
90.1
°W
,
10 m
2
MOCNESS midwater trawl, depth of collection
999–1200 m
, bottom depth
2559 m
,
23
June
2011
(
Figs. 1
,
2
B);
UW
154626
, female,
36 mm
, R/V
Meg Skansi
, Station SE
3
D-net
1
, northern Gulf of
Mexico
,
26.6
°N
,
86.8
°W
,
10 m
2
MOCNESS midwater trawl, depth of collection
800–999 m
, bottom depth
2967 m
,
11
September
2011
(
Fig.
3
).
Diagnosis.—
Escal bulb with an elongate, cylindrical, internally pigmented anterior appendage; distal escal appendage a short cylindrical stalk, with an expanded distal end and a pair of tapering, filamentous prolongations emerging anteriorly from
1
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, University of Washington, Campus Box
355020
, Seattle, Washington
98105
-
5020
; E-mail: twp@uw.edu. Send reprint requests to this address.
2
Nova Southeastern University Oceanographic Center,
8000
North Ocean Drive,
Dania
Beach, Florida
33004
; E-mail: tsutton
1
@nova.edu.
Submitted:
29
October
2014
. Accepted:
29
January
2015
. Associate Editor: D. Buth.
©
2015
by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists DOI:
10.1643
/CI-
14-181
Published online:
June 4, 2015
Fig. 1.
Lasiognathus dinema
Pietsch and Sutton
,
new species
, paratype, UW 152604, female, 30 mm SL.
bases of escal hooks; distal escal appendage bearing three, lightly pigmented, bony, hook-like denticles; posterior escal appendage membranous, antero-posteriorly compressed, with a scalloped or rounded distal margin (
Figs. 2
,
3
).
Description.—
Length of illicium
15–47 mm
(
49.5
–50.0% SL); illicium of three known specimens fully extended anteriorly, cutaneous sheath surrounding posterior extension of illicial pterygiophore fully internalized (
Pietsch,
2009
:
84
, fig.
85
). A cylindrical, internally pigmented, anterior escal appendage (a light-guiding structure, without a homolog in any other known species of
Lasiognathus
;
Pietsch,
2009
:
237
, figs.
245, 248
), rounded distally in
holotype
, more elongate and tapering to a point in
paratypes
, length
1.3–2.8 mm
(
4.3
–
2.9
% SL). A thin, translucent, broad-based, antero-posteriorly compressed, posterior escal appendage, length
0.9–2.2 mm
(3.0–
2.3
% SL), with a scalloped or rounded distal margin, emerging from below escal pore. Distal escal appendage cylindrical, with narrow base and distal swelling, length
1.9–4.8 mm
(
6.3
–5.0% SL), bearing three lightly pigmented, strongly curved, bony hooks: one somewhat larger, length 2.0–
2.2 mm
(
6.7
–
2.2
% SL), emerging from distal tip, directed posteriorly; and a pair of near equal size, length
1.4
/
1.6
–
1.4
/
1.9 mm
(5.0/
5.3
–
1.9
/2.0% SL), situated somewhat below, directed anteriorly. A pair of elongate, filamentous, tapering prolongations of distal appendage emerging slightly above bases of anteriorly directed escal hooks, considerably smaller in
paratypes
, length
1.6
/
2.2 mm
(
6.7
/
7.3
% SL); more highly developed in
holotype
, length
6.3
/
6.4 mm
(
6.6
/
6.7
% SL).
Fig. 2. Escae of
Lasiognathus dinema
Pietsch and Sutton
,
new species
, in preservation: (A) Holotype, UW 152603, female, 95 mm SL, left lateral view; (B) Paratype, UW 152604, female, 30 mm SL, right lateral view (prolongation of distal escal appendage rotated to show anterior face).
Fig. 3. Esca of
Lasiognathus dinema
Pietsch and Sutton
,
new species
, paratype, UW 154626, female, 36 mm SL, left lateral view, in preservation. Image courtesy of L. Malarky (NSUOC).
The esca of all three
type
specimens is well preserved (
Figs. 2
,
3
). The head and body of the
holotype
, however, is in extremely poor condition, so badly damaged upon capture that only a few of the standard ceratioid measurements can be made (the following are given in percent of standard length, values for the smaller
paratype
are followed by those of the
holotype
when available): tip of upper jaw to posteriormost margin of preopercle
41.7
–?; tip of upper jaw to anteriormost margin of opercular opening
53.3
–?; distance between tips of sphenotic spines 25.0–?; tip of sphenotic spine to posttemporal
13.7
–?; tip of sphenotic spine to tip of quadrate spine 60.0–?; length of sphenotic spine 6.0–
2.2
; length of quadrate spine
5.8
–
2.3
; length of premaxilla
36.7
–
35.8
; length of lower jaw
34.7
–
28.4
; longest tooth in upper jaw
11.7
–
6.3
; longest tooth in lower jaw
4.7
–
2.6
. Total number of teeth on premaxillae
24–86
, on dentaries
23–98
; vomerine teeth absent; dorsal-fin rays
5– 6
; anal-fin rays
5
–
5
; pectoral-fin rays
18
/
19
–
19
/
19
; pelvic fins absent; caudal-fin rays
9
–
9
. Remaining description as for the genus (
Bertelsen and Pietsch,
1996
;
Pietsch,
2009
).
Geographic distribution.—
Lasiognathus dinema
is known from three female specimens collected in the northern Gulf of
Mexico
, over the Mississippi Fan bathyal accumulation (
27–28
°N,
87–90
°W; bottom depths
2000–3000 m
). Specimens were collected in closing trawls fished between
800– 1000
and
1000–1200 m
, and in a non-closing trawl fished between
0–1271 m
.
Etymology.—
The name
dinema
, is derived from the Greek,
di
, a prefix meaning ‘‘two,’’ and
nema
, ‘‘thread,’’ in allusion to the two elongate, thread-like prolongations emerging anteriorly from the bases of the escal hooks of this species (
Figs.
1–3
).
DISCUSSION
The specimens for this study were collected as part of an ongoing Natural Resource Damage Assessment Process conducted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (for more information, see http://www.darrp.noaa.gov/about/nrda.html) pursuant to the
Deepwater Horizon
Oil Spill (
DWHOS
). The stations at which the
type
specimens were collected were within a
250 km
radius of the Macondo wellhead, at depths between
800– 1300 m
. The depths coincided with the depths of massive horizontal intrusions of hydrocarbons during and after
DWHOS
(~
800–1200 m
;
Camilli et al.,
2010
;
Valentine et al.,
2010
;
Kessler et al.,
2011
), though the specimens described herein were not necessarily exposed. The finding of a new species in this region adds to our knowledge of the deep-pelagic Gulf in particular, and to the bathypelagic zone in general, which post-Census of Marine Life surveys have identified as the most chronically under-sampled environment on earth (
Webb et al.,
2010
). In addition to describing a new species, this report is the first record of the genus
Lasiognathus
in the Gulf.
Like the majority of ceratioid anglerfishes, examination of all available material of
Lasiognathus
has revealed no characters that allow separation of the species other than those of the esca and its appendages (
Bertelsen and Pietsch,
1996
;
Pietsch, 2005
,
2009
). The differences in escal morphology, however, now strongly indicate the existence of six species.
Lasiognathus dinema
differs from all previously recognized species of the genus in having an anterior escal appendage and a pair of elongate, filamentous prolongations of the distal escal appendage, the former having no apparent homolog in any of its congeners; the latter represented by a single prolongation in
L. saccostoma
,
L. intermedius
, and
L. amphirhamphus
, but absent altogether in
L. beebei
and
L. waltoni
. The new species differs further from
L. beebei
in having the escal hooks emerging from a cylindrical distal appendage, rather than from a transverse, fanshaped distal appendage (
Bertelsen and Pietsch,
1996
:
404
, fig.
2
); from
L. intermedius
in having a broad-based, anteroposteriorly compressed posterior escal appendage instead of a cylindrical appendage (
Bertelsen and Pietsch,
1996
:
406
, fig.
4
); from
L. saccostoma
in having simple distal prolongations of the distal escal appendage instead of bearing numerous lateral serrations or filaments (
Bertelsen and Pietsch,
1996
:
407
, fig.
5
); and from
L. amphirhamphus
in having three escal hooks instead of only two (
Pietsch,
2005
:
78
, fig.
2
).