Rediscovery and description of Paramormyrops sphekodes (Sauvage, 1879) and a new cryptic Paramormyrops (Mormyridae: Osteoglossiformes) from the Ogooué River of Gabon using morphometrics, DNA sequencing and electrophysiology
Author
Rich, Madeline
Author
Sullivan, John P.
Author
Hopkins, Carl D.
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2017
2017-05-05
180
613
646
journal article
3432
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlw004
7e1fd8ac-534b-4a96-8252-1679b0723fe1
0024-4082
5711034
C93D204F-FFF4-4C9B-AD05-52DDF9298384
PARAMORMYROPS SPHEKODES
(
SAUVAGE, 1879
)
Mormyrops sphekodes
Sauvage, 1879: 101
.
Lectotype
: MNHN
A 893
,
paralectotype
:
MNHN 1998-1050
. Type locality:
Ogooué River
at
Doumé
,
Gabon
.
Mormyrops sphekodes
–
Sauvage, 1880: 55
, Pl. 2,
Fig. 4
.
Mormyrus sphecodes
–
Günther, 1896: 280
Marcusenius sphecodes
–
Boulenger, 1898b: 793
Brienomyrus (Brienomyrus) sphecodes
–
Taverne, 1971: 106
Paramormyrops sphekodes
–
Hopkins
et al.
, 2007: 292–293
[Note:
Hopkins
et al.
(2007: 304
; fig. 12.65) erroneously illustrated
P. sphekodes
using the
paralectotype
rather than the
lectotype
. Both specimens are now regarded as the same species (see comparison with existing types, in the following text).]
Redescription of
Paramormyrops sphekodes
Because
of the confusion surrounding the identity of
P. sphekodes
, its rarity in our collections from
Gabon
, and the existence of only two historic specimens from the type locality, we redescribe this species based on the
lectotype
,
paralectotype
, four topotypes and five additional specimens from near the type locality
.
Lectotype
:
MNHN
A.
893, 113.87 mm
SL, male.
Type
location:
Gabon
,
Ogooué-Lolo
,
Ogooué River
at
Doumé
(modern GPS coordinates:
0.84137°S
,
12.96548°E
).
A. Marche
, late 1876–early 1877.
Paralectotype
:
MNHN 1998-1050
,
96.7 mm
SL, female.
Type
location:
Gabon
, same location and date as
lectotype
.
Topotypes (4):
Rapids in front of the village of Doumé on the Ogooué
River
(
0.84137°S
,
12.96548°E
)
:
CUMV 96810
(1, specimen no. JPS-1118)
117.7 mm
SL. J.P. Sullivan,
29 May 2011
;
MRAC
B5-26
-P-2 (1, specimen no. JPS-1192)
113.5 mm
SL. J.P. Sullivan,
17 September 2014
;
AMNH 264378
(1, specimen no. JPS- 1193)
94.5 mm
SL. J.P. Sullivan,
17 September 2014
;
MNHN 2015-0257
(1, specimen no. JPS-1201)
111 mm
SL. J.P. Sullivan,
17 September 2014
.
Other specimens (5):
Five specimens included here are from a site close to the
type
locality.
Sébé
River
,
45 km
south-east of Doumé,
Ogooué-Lolo
,
Gabon
(
0.93442°S
,
13.35777°E
) J.P. Sullivan,
20 September 2014
:
MNHN 2015-0258
(1, specimen no. JPS-1214) male,
112.5 mm
SL
;
AMNH 264377
(1, specimen no. JPS-1216) male,
110 mm
SL
;
CUMV 98161
(1, specimen no. JPS-1219) female,
118.3 mm
SL
;
MRAC
B5-26
-P-1 (1, specimen no. JPS-1230) male,
133 mm
SL
;
22 September 2014
;
CUMV 98177
(1, specimen no. JPS-1238), male,
119.5 mm
SL
.
Diagnosis:
Paramormyrops sphekodes
is distinguished from all other
Paramormyrops
by this combination of characters: 5 teeth in upper-jaw,
6 in
lower; 12 circumpeduncular scales; sharp head profile, V-shaped when viewed from above; snout angle 48–56° corresponding to an interorbital width 1–1.36 times the snout length;
BD 15.4
–
17.31
% SL,
BD
at pectoral fin 84–94%
BD
at urogenital pore; eye diameter 13–16% HL measured from snout tip to posterior edge of bony operculum; snout length 24–27% HL; ratio of HL to depth (HLx/ HDx, measured from radiographs) 1.1–1.24; HL 21–23% SL;
EOD
waveform with two phases, head-positive then negative,
EOD
duration 1.635 ± 0.226 ms with a corresponding power spectrum peak at 1573 ± 531 Hz; electric organ composed of
type
NPp electrocytes, that is having
N
on-
P
enetrating stalks innervated on the
p
osterior face of the cell (
Hopkins, 1999
)
.
Comparison with other
Paramormyrops
: With
five teeth in the upper jaw and six in the lower,
P. sphekodes
differs from
P. hopkinsi
,
P. jacksoni
and
P. tavernei
, which have seven or more teeth in the upper jaw and eight or more in the lower jaw. With 12 circumpeduncular scales, it differs from
P. longicaudatus
, the undescribed species coded in
Sullivan
et al.
(2002)
as
P. sp. ‘OFF’,
P. batesii
and
P. tavernei
which all have 16 or more. With its relatively sharp V-shaped head profile,
P. sphekodes
differs from
P. batesii
,
P. gabonensis
,
P. retrodorsalis
,
P. tavernei
and
P. kingsleyae
which have distinctly blunt or U-shaped snouts.
P. sphekodes
has
type
NPp electrocytes in its electric organ, as do seven other
Paramormyrops
from
Lower
Guinea
, while
P. batesii
and
P. kingsleyae
have electric organs composed of electrocytes with penetrating stalks innervated on the anterior face (
Type
Pa). These characters are summarized in the key and in
Fig. 16
.
Paramormyrops sphekodes
differs from
P. curvifrons
in head and snout shape. Head and shout are shorter, deeper and more rounded when viewed laterally in
P. sphekodes
compared to
P. curvifrons
.
P. curvifrons
also has a downward sloping forehead, protruding snout and enlarged chin. The ratio of HL to SL is
23.5–26.9 in
P. curvifrons
, higher than
21.5–23.4 in
P. sphekodes
(
Fig. 5A
,
Table 2
), while the ratio of HD to HL (external measurement using callipers) is reduced in
P. curvifrons
compared to
P. sphekodes
(
Fig. 5C
). The ratio of pre-pectoral distance to pre-dorsal distance is greater in
P. curvifrons
compared to
P. sphekodes
(
Fig. 5B
,
Table 2
), and
P. curvifrons
has a significantly narrower snout than
P. sphekodes
measured by either snout angle (
Fig. 5G
) or ratio IOW/SNL (
Fig. 5D
,
Table 2
).
Paramormyrops sphekodes
is most easily confused with the species referred to above as SN4, but SN4 may be recognized by its much longer duration EOD, and by subtle morphometric characters discussed above and illustrated in
Figs 3
and
4
. Other distinguishing characters are presented below in the description of the new species.
Description:
Based on the
lectotype
Fig. 1A
(above) and 1B and 10 other specimens,
Table 2
.
Figure 7
shows
five specimens
in photographs of live fish in the field.
A small-bodied
Paramormyrops
, the largest is a male,
133 mm
SL,
153 mm
TL. Body laterally compressed, maximum width at opercular bones. Viewed laterally, dorsal and ventral profile nearly parallel from behind the head to the first anal ray. Median BD 16.1% SL at pectoral fin, 17.6% SL at the urogenital pore. The ratio of these two BDs 84–89%, indicating that the depth changes little from anterior to posterior of the body anterior of the anal fin. Caudal peduncle length 17–20% SL, slightly wider at its origin than middle, depth 25–29% CPL. Lobes of caudal fin rounded.
Lateral head profile above eye usually gently convex to very slightly concave in some individuals (
Fig. 7
, #1214). Snout short and smoothly rounded (
Fig. 7
). Forehead downward-sloping from halfway between opercular opening and snout tip. Tip of the snout one half eye diameter below the ventral margin of the eye. Viewed dorsally, head and snout V-shaped or sharp, median snout angle 53.6°, less sharp than
P. curvifrons
(
Fig. 5D
).
Mouth small, rictus directly beneath nares. Chin protrudes slightly below gular region, not extending beyond snout. Eye small, ED 11–14% HL, positioned mid-laterally. Eye socket forms pale ring around pigmented eye, with gold iris and dark centre. IOW 26.8–29.3% HL. Anterior naris about 1/3 distance from snout tip to eye, slightly below line drawn through centre of eye, posterior naris halfway between anterior naris and eye, at about level of eye’s lower margin. Opercular opening begins anterior to base of pectoral fin. POL 60–68% HL.
Pectoral-fin origin beneath posterior terminus of opercular opening, slightly below mid-horizontal line, length 12.4–17.0% SL, 11 rays. Pelvic-fin origin at 35.0– 38.8% SL, length 9.2–10.8% SL, positioned ventrally, 6 rays. Dorsal-fin origin at 64–65% SL; anterior margin gently convex, trailing margin concave in first third, remainder levels off at ½ DFH. Maximum height 62.3– 79.2% DFL, 20–23 total rays. Anal-fin origin slightly anterior to dorsal-fin origin: dorsal-fin origin above seventh (fifth branched) anal-fin ray. Anal fin mirrors general shape of dorsal fin, maximum height 45.2–65.0% AFL. In males, anterior AFR thickened and stiff with a noticeable notch at the base of the anal fin, spanning anterior half of anal-fin base. End of anal-fin base terminus directly beneath end of dorsal-fin base, rays 24–28. Lobes of caudal fin rounded, equal, slightly wider than caudal peduncle, deeply cleft, scaled at their bases.
Scales fine, cycloid, absent from head. Pierced lateral line scales, 63–68 based on recent specimens (
lectotype
= 72, significantly fewer than Sauvage’s description of 85 which must have been total scales rather than pierced scales). Our counts of lateral line scales on the
lectotype
are unreliable because of damage to the specimen, other counts and measurements for the
lectotype
are indicated separately from other specimens in
Table 2
. Scales between lateral line and anterior base of dorsal fin 9–11, 10–15 scale rows between pelvic fin and lateral line. Circumpeduncular scales 12. Vertebrae: 43–45 total, 18–19 precaudal, 24–26 caudal. Teeth bicuspid,
5 in
upper,
6 in
lower jaw.
Figure 7.
Five specimens of
P. sphekodes
from Ogooué basin of Gabon. From top to bottom: specimen tag number 1192, female, 113.5 mm; 1201, female, 111 mm from the Ogooué River at Doumé; 1214, male, 112.5 mm; 1230, male, 133 mm and 1238, male, 119 mm from the Sébé River nearby. Scale bars = 1 cm.
Coloration:
All fins with lightly pigmented rays, membranes hyaline. Dark band absent between dorsal and anal fins. Body darker dorsally, lighter ventrally. When alive, tan-brown body with yellow-olive or golden accents on top of head, back, and belly. Mouth, chin, and gular region unpigmented, whitish. Many small unpigmented spots and pores over electroreceptors (mormyromast and ampullary organs) visible on top of head and back, with fewer, large white spots (knollenorgans) on head. Preserved specimens uniform greyish-brown.
Electric organ discharge:
Short biphasic pulses – head positive first then head negative – average duration, 0.851 ± 0.352 ms (
Fig. 8A, C
,
Table 3
). First positive peak, P1, width W1 0.519 ± 0.194 ms (range:
0.320
–0.940
ms) – 1.6 times longer than width W2. First-time derivative of
EOD
rises smoothly from baseline with a single peak before P1 (
Fig. 8B
). Power spectrum of
EOD
peaks at 1910 ± 540 Hz
(
n = 9,
Table 3
,
Fig. 10 D, E
). Other quantitative measurements of EODs are summarized in
Table 3
using reference landmarks illustrated for the biphasic
EOD
in
Fig. 8A
and its power spectrum in
Fig. 8D
.
Several other species of
Paramormyrops
with biphasic EODs possess electric organs composed of electrocytes with
N
on-
P
enetrating stalks that are innervated on the
p
osterior faces of each cell (
Type
NPp
Bennett, 1971
;
Bass, 1986
;
Sullivan
et al.
, 2000
;
Gallant
et al.
, 2011
). Other species in this and other genera produce triphasic EODs (three peaks), beginning with a small head-negative phase P0, in advance of the larger head-positive phase P1, and the final head-negative phase P2. In all species with triphasic EODs, the electric organs are composed of electrocytes with
P
enetrating stalks innervated on the
a
nterior face of each cell (
Type
Pa in
Alves-Gomes & Hopkins 1997
). Inspection of the EODs of all
P. sphekodes
reveals that the P0 peak is absent, even when the discharge trace is expanded 20 times by amplification (
Fig. 8A
, thin trace), suggesting that the electric organ is composed of
Type
NPp electrocytes. This is confirmed by dissection and histology shown in
Fig. 9
.
Like many other mormyrids,
P. sphekodes
exhibits a sex difference in EOD waveform duration. One male recorded near the end of the rainy season in
May 2011
had the longest EODs in all our EOD recordings (1.60 ms), but other, smaller males recorded early in the rainy season of
September 2014
had EODs more similar to those of females. The averages of male and female EOD durations do not differ significantly (Student’s
t
= 1.439, d.f. = 7,
P
= 0.19,
Table 3
). In all adult males with
SL
>
115 mm
, we note that the ratio of the width of the second peak, W2, to total duration, DT, is greater than for that for females (Student’s
t
= 2.99,
P
= 0.03). The ratio of W1 to DT is correspondingly less for males. The variation seen for male EODs might be a reflection of seasonal changes in male pulses which begin to elongate before or shortly after the onset of the rains when most mormyrids breed (
Hopkins, 1980
, 1981;
Hopkins & Bass, 1981
;
Bass & Hopkins, 1983
,
1985
).
Distribution. In spite of several previous collecting trips to the lower, middle and upper Ogooué River of
Gabon
in 1999, 2001 and 2002, our only collections of this species are from Doumé, the
type
locality (2011, 2014), and the Sébé River, about
45 km
from Doumé (2014). Both sites are within the
Ogooué-Lolo Province
of
Gabon
(
Fig. 10
) and both are large river habitats with rocky bottoms, sandy substrate, with rushing water and rapids (
Fig. 11
); this species was absent from nearby streams and other smaller tributaries.
Etymology:
The name
sphekodes
comes from the Greek, σφήκα, for wasp, which may refer to the fish’s elongate and slender body (
Harder, 2000
); however,
Sauvage (1879
,
1880
) gives no explanation for his name for this species.
The specimens referred to as ‘SN4’ above and in
Sullivan et al. (2002
, 2004) are here described as a new species.