Epinephelus geoffroyi (Klunzinger, 1870) (Pisces: Serranidae), a valid species of grouper endemic to the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden
Author
Randall, John E.
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
Author
Krupp, Friedhelm
Author
Rose, Jean Michel
Author
Fricke, Ronald
text
Zootaxa
2013
3641
5
524
532
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3641.5.2
803b3c7d-092f-4338-a4d7-5db8acb4c2ae
1175-5326
223982
30838A5A-2838-4B44-8E5F-AD87D504B611
Epinephelus geoffroyi
(Klunzinger, 1870)
(
Figs. 1A
& B, 2B, 3, 4, 5, 6A & B;
Table 1
)
Serranus tauvina
(
non
Forsskål) Geoffroy St. Hilaire,
1809-17
: 317, pl. 20, fig. 1 (Suez,
Egypt
, Red Sea).
Serranus areolatus
(
non
Forsskål) Valenciennes in Cuvier and Valenciennes, 1828: 350.
Serranus areolatus
(
non
Forsskål) Günther, 1859: 149.
Serranus geoffroyi
Klunzinger, 1870: 675
, footnote (
type
locality, Red Sea).
Serranus celebicus
var.
multipunctatus
Kossmann and Räuber, 1877: 6
(
type
locality, Red Sea).
Serranus (Hyposerranus) geoffroyi
Klunzinger, 1884: 3
(Red Sea).
Serranus assabensis
Giglioli, 1888: 68
(
type
locality, Assab,
Ethiopia
).
Diagnosis.
Dorsal rays XI,16–18 (usually 17); pectoral rays 17 or 18; lateral-line scales usually 49–52; gill rakers 25–29; caudal fin slightly emarginate; membranes of spinous portion of dorsal fin slightly incised; third or fourth dorsal spines longest,
2.5–3.2 in
head length; soft portion of anal fin distinctly angular, the third or fourth ray longest,
1.8–2.7 in
head length; head, body, and fins whitish with numerous, small, close-set, dark brown spots, becoming more widely spaced on abdomen and chest; posterior margin of caudal fin without a narrow, clear whitish margin.
Description.
Dorsal rays XI,16–18 [XI,17] (strongly modal 17); anal rays III,8 [III,8]; pectoral rays 17 or 18 [17]; lateral-line scales 48–52 [51]; longitudinal scale series 96–113 [112]; scales on body ctenoid; auxiliary scales present; gill rakers 25–29 [28]; vertebrae 10 + 24; second supraneural (predorsal) bone small and distinctly curved; body depth 2.9–3.3 [3.2] in SL; head pointed, the lower jaw strongly projecting; dorsal profile of head to nape straight; head length 2.45–2.6 [2.6] in SL; middle opercular spine nearer lower than upper spine; snout length 3.5– 4.0 in head length [4.0]; interorbital space slightly convex, the least width 5.7–6.8 [6.8] in head length; eye diameter ranging from
5.2 in
head length in a 117-mm specimen to
7.2 in
a 406-mm specimen) [5.2]; maxilla extending to a vertical from slightly anterior to slightly posterior to rear edge or orbit; caudal-peduncle depth 3.1– 3.3 [3.3] in head length; opercular flap moderately pointed; rounded corner of preopercle with 4–7 [4] enlarged serrate; interopercle and subopercle partially serrate; caudal fin slightly emarginate to truncate, 1.6–1.8 [1.8] in head length; spinous portion of dorsal fin slightly incised; third or fourth [3rd] dorsal spines longest, 2.5–3.2 [2.5] in head length; soft portion of anal fin distinctly angular, the third or fourth [4th] ray longest, 1.8–2.7 [2.2] in head length; pectoral fins 1.75–1.95 [1.92] in head length; pelvic fins usually not reaching anus, 1.95–2.4 [2.0] in head length; dorsal, anal, and pelvic fins relatively shorter with growth; head, body, and fins whitish with numerous, small, close-set, dark brown spots, becoming more widely spaced on chest and abdomen; posterior margin of caudal fin narrowly pale, but containing a single row of small dark spots.
FIGURE 3.
Epinephelus geoffroyi
, Gulf of Aqaba. Photo R.C. Steene.
Distribution.
Throughout the Red Sea and the western Gulf of Aden.
Remarks.
The first author examined a Klunzinger specimen of
Serranus geoffroyi
at the Naturhistorishes Museum in Vienna, NMW
39276, 321 mm
SL, identified as a
syntype
. The meristic data, including 28 gill rakers, are concordant with those given here for the species, and the anal fin was noted as very pointed, the longest anal ray
2.05 in
head length (
Fig. 4A
). He reported that there are no other
syntypes
at the museum. The locality given for the specimen is only Red Sea. However, it is likely that it is Al Quseir (Kosseir),
Egypt
, where Klunzinger obtained his specimens. The
syntype
status is therefore very questionable because the specimen was probably collected by Klunzinger during his second stay in Al Quseir in
1872-1875
, and would have only been available for the Klunzinger (1884) publication, not 1870. Klunzinger's (1870) footnote is certainly based on the specimen collected by W. Griessinger at Port Safaga (
Egypt
,
26°44' N
33°56' E
) in
July 1852
(SMNS 233); this would have been the only specimen of the species present at the SMNS in 1870. It was missed in the SMNS
type
catalogs by Fricke (1992, 2005), but was recently rediscovered by the fifth author in the collection. It has 28 gill rakers and a very pointed anal fin, the longest ray
2.2 in
head length. We conclude that this specimen (SMNS
233, 191 mm
SL) is the
holotype
of
Serranus geoffroyi
Klunzinger, 1870
; it is illustrated here as
Fig. 4
B.
Comparisons.
In addition to having modally two more gill rakers,
Epinephelus geoffroyi
may be distinguished from
E. chlorostigma
by the more acutely pointed soft portion of the anal fin, and in color. The dark spots on the abdomen and chest are more widely spaced. The caudal fin of
E. chlorostigma
has a narrow pale whitish posterior margin. The posterior margin of the caudal fin of
E. geoffroyi
is not white but it may be whitish, in which case it contains a vertical row of small dark brown spots or transverse lines.
FIGURE 4.
A: Former syntypes of
Epinephelus geoffroyi
, NMW 39276, 321 mm SL, Red Sea. Photo H. Wellendorf. B: Holotype of
Epinephelus geoffroyi
, SMNS 233, 191 mm SL, Port Safaqa, Egypt, Red Sea. Photo R. Fricke.
FIGURE 5.
Epinephelus chlorostigma
, IES 2311-011, 235 mm SL, Gulf of Tadjoura. Photo J.M. Rose.
Epinephelus geoffroyi
and
E. chlorostigma
are sympatric in the western Gulf of Aden. The fourth author collected a specimen of
E. geoffroyi
in the harbor of
Djibouti
in 1981 and sent it to the first author, thinking it might be an undescribed species. It was wrongly catalogued at the Bishop Museum as
E. chlorostigma
(BPBM
30865, 219 mm
). The fourth author also caught the true
E. chlorostigma
in 1979 by hook and line from a depth of at least
100 m
in the Gulf of Tadjoura (IES 311-011,
235 mm
, illustrated here as
Fig. 5
). In addition, he collected a specimen of
E. geoffroyi
off Al Mukallah on the coast
Yemen
in 2005, the present easternmost record of the species in the Gulf of Aden. There are no valid records of
Epinephelus chlorostigma
from the Red Sea, but it might be expected in the deeper water of the southern part.
As
noted by Randall and Heemstra (1991), most records of
Epinephelus chlorostigma
are insular. There are no confirmed records for continental waters of Asia or
Australia
, and none for the East Indies, except one from
Papua New Guinea
.
Epinephelus geoffroyi
is usually found on or near coral reefs at depths of
10–20 m
; one was speared by the first author in
4 m
in the Gulf of Suez, and another near the southern end of the east coast of the Sinai Peninsula in
28 m
.
The second author observed the species at the Farasan Islands near the southern end of the Red Sea in
3–
32 m
. The depth range given in the literature for
E. chlorostigma
is
32–
280 m
.
Randall and Heemstra (1991: 119) reported slightly higher scale counts for
Epinephelus chlorostigma
in
11 specimens
examined in the Pacific, compared to the Indian Ocean: 50–53 lateral-line scales vs. 48–52, and 104– 125 scales in longitudinal series vs. 97–119. A molecular study of these two populations would be of interest, as well as a genetic comparison with
E. geoffroyi
.
FIGURE 6.
Epinephelus geoffroyi
. A: Ras Mohammaed, Sinai Peninsula. B: Farasan Archipelago. Photos S.V. Bogorodsky.
The second author’s underwater photographs of
Epinephelus geoffroyi
(
Fig. 6
A taken in the northern Red Sea and
Fig. 6
B at the Farasan Islands near the southern end) in the typical habitat of sand or sand and rubble substratum near coral patches, exhibit a camouflage color pattern of large irregular dark brown blotches on the body and dorsal and anal fins. He noted that
E. areolatus
and
E. geoffroyi
are the most common groupers observed at the Farasan Islands.
Mention should be made of two other groupers of the northwestern Indian Ocean with close-set, dark brown spots that might be confused with
Epinephelus geoffroyi
:
E. gabriellae
Randall and Heemstra, 1991
(
Fig. 7
A) ranges from the Gulf of
Oman
and south coast of
Oman
at least to the eastern Gulf of Aden, and
E. polylepis
Randall and Heemstra, 1991
(
Fig. 7
B) is reported from the west coast of
India
to the Gulf of Aden.
Epinephelus gabriellae
is readily distinguished by having only 14 or 15 dorsal soft rays, and
E. polystigma
has a very high count of 65–72 lateral-line scales, and 126–137 scales in longitudinal series.