Indo-West Pacific species of Trachinotus with spots on their sides as adults, with description of a new species endemic to the Marquesas Islands (Teleostei: Carangidae)
Author
Smith-Vaniz, William F.
Author
Walsh, Stephen J.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-08-02
4651
1
1
37
journal article
25531
10.11646/zootaxa.4651.1.1
eeaba26d-91f6-41e6-b88a-373c047d47cf
1175-5326
3358412
9AAC432F-D0FC-470A-8468-7B24E4D57514
Trachinotus botla
(Shaw)
Largespot pompano, Common dart
Figures 2A
,
5C
,
6–8
,
12–16
;
Tables 1–6
,
8
Scomber botla parah
Russell, 1803:32
, pl. 142 (non-valid name; Vizagapatam,
India
).
Scomber botla
Shaw, 1803:591
(original description; Vizagapatam,
India
; no
types
known);
Day, 1875:233
(listed as synonym of
Trachinotus russelii
).
Trachinotus russelii
Cuvier
in
Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1832:436
(original description;
Pondichéry
=
Puducherry
,
India
;
syntypes
MNHN A-5663);
McCulloch, 1914:223
(misidentification =
T
.
botla
, Bernier
Island, Western Australia);
Oshima, 1925:408
(after Day);
McCulloch, 1929:192
(checklist of Australian fishes; listed as synonym of
T. botla
);
Smith, 1967:163
, pl. 37 (Natal,
Mozambique
and
Kenya
);
Smith-Vaniz
et al
., 1979:30
(
syntype
listed as synonym of
T. botla
);
Talwar and Kacker, 1984:488
(
India
);
Joshi
et al
., 2011:407
, color pl. LVI (
India
);
Joshi
et al
., 2016:44
(Gulf of Mannar, checklist).
Trachynotus russellii
.
Day, 1875:233
, pl. 51B, fig. 3 (Canara,
India
);
Barnard, 1927:554
(description; Natal Coast);
Gushiken, 1983:164
(description after
Williams, 1958
; no specimens listed from
Japan
).
Trachynotus oblongus
(not of Cuvier).
Gilchrist and Thompson, 1908:187
(Natal).
Trachinotus russelli
.
Pellegrin, 1914:228
(
Madagascar
);
Weber and de Beaufort, 1931:289
(synonymy with
T. oblongus
,
T. coppingeri
and
T. velox
listed as synonyms; description; distribution);
Munro, 1955:131
(
Ceylon
), pl. 22, fig. 370, after
Ogilby, 1915
, pl. 28 =
T. coppingeri
;
Williams, 1958:424
, pl. 26, fig. 27 (East Africa);
Munro, 1960:133
, fig. 851 (in part, only records from Western Australia);
Fourmanoir and Crosnier,1964:17
(Nosy Be,
Madagascar
);
Maugé, 1967:225
(
Toliara
[=Tuléar],
Madagascar
);
Abdussamad
et al
., 2013:25
, color fig. 12 (
India
).
Trachynotus russelli
.
Pellegrin, 1914:228
(Mahambo and Fort Dauphin [Tolagnaro],
Madagascar
).
Trachinotus botla
.
Smith-Vaniz
et al
., 1979:30
(
syntype
listed with
T. russellii
in synonymy);
Smith-Vaniz, 1986:659
, fig. 210.50 (
South Africa
to
Kenya
and
Madagascar
);
Hutchins and Swainston, 1986:58
, 130, fig. 288 (
Western Australia
to
Northern Territory
);
Van der Elst, 1988:161
, unnumbered color photo (southern Africa);
Allen and Swainston, 1988:74
, color fig. 459 (northwestern
Australia
).
Paxton
et al
., 1989:586
(Zoological Catalogue of
Australia
);
Hutchins, 1990:270
(Shark Bay,
Western Australia
);
Smale
et al
., 1995:127
, pl. 74, figs. E1-3 (otolith description);
Randall, 1995:472
, color fig. 472 (Gulf of
Oman
);
Smith-Vaniz, 1999:2747
, unnumbered fig. (“apparently restricted to the Indian Ocean,” including
Western Australia
);
Hutchins, 2001:33
(
Western Australia
);
Manilo and Bogorodsky, 2003
:S107 (
Oman
, Gulf of Aden and Somali);
Allen and Adrim, 2003:38
(
Sumatra
to
Java
); Heemstra & Heemstra, 2004:314, unnumbered color fig. (southern Africa);
Springer and Smith-Vaniz, 2008:31
(supraneural and pterygiophore insertion patterns);
White
et al
., 2013:176
, color fig. 63.46 (
Indonesia
);
Moore
et al
., 2014:186
(Kimberly region,
Australia
);
Psomadakis
et al
, 2015:230
, pl. 18, color fig. 143 (
Pakistan
);
Parker & Booth, 2015:247
(biology and life history);
Fricke
et al
., 2018:188
(
Madagascar
).
Trachinotus russellii
.
Oshima, 1925:408
(compiled, after Day);
Smith, 1949:222
, fig. 549 (Natal, Delagoa and occasionally East London);
Kiener, 1966:1119
, pl 19, fig. 35 (
Madagascar
).
Trachinotus baillonii
. (not of Lacepède)
Fowler, 1934b:452
(Natal).
Caesiomorus botla
.
Whitley, 1948:20
(
Western Australia
).
Palinurichthys umhlangae
Smith, 1949:304
, fig. 849b (original description; Umhlanga,
KwaZulu-Natal
,
South Africa
;
syntype
SAIAB [formerly RUSI] 13654).
Trachinotus coppingeri
(not of Günther)
Joshi
et al
., 2011:399
, color pl. 60, fig. A (Tuticorin,
India
);
Abdussamad
et al
., 2013:25
, color fig. 13 (
India
);
Joshi
et al
., 2016:44
(Gulf of Mannar, checklist).
Type material examined.
CAS-SU 14445
(
342 mm
FL),
neotype
of
Trachinotus botla
Shaw, Vizagapatam
,
India
,
17°41’N
,
83°13’E
(see Nomenclatural history);
MNHN
A.5663 (
314 mm
FL), dry mount on glass plate,
syntype
of
Trachinotus russelii
Cuvier
,
Pondichéry
, Sonnerat,
India
;
SAIAB
[formerly
RUSI
] 13654 (
32 mm
FL),
syntype
of
Palinurichthys umhlangae
Smith, Umhlanga, KwaZulu-Natal
,
South Africa
.
Other material examined.
110 specimens
,
73–558 mm
FL, including 39 uncataloged specimens from
Sri Lanka
and
India
that cannot be located but presumably were transferred to
CAS
(listed as
CAS
uncat.).
Data
for these specimens were taken by
F.H. Berry
when he worked at the
National Marine Fishery Service’s
former
Tropical Atlantic Biological Laboratory in Miami
,
Florida
, and subsequently made available to us
.
South Africa
:
SAM 9979
(1, 178),
Durban
;
SAM 9980
(1, 167),
Natal
;
SAIAB 10453
(1, 178) and
SAIAB 11079
(2, 248–258),
Maputo
Bay
(=
Delagoa Bay
), (
25°59’S
,
32°57’E
)
;
ANSP 159120
(2, 128–152 C&S),
Sodwana Bay
(
27°32’S
,
32°41’E
)
;
ANSP 54830
(5, 91–184),
ANSP 93097
(1, 348) and
ANSP 95000
(2, 121–189),
Durban
(
29°53’S
,
31°03’E
)
;
SAIAB 7491
(1, 313),
Isipingo
(
29°59’S
,
30°41’E
)
;
SAIAB 10268
(2, 290–327),
Algoa Bay
(
33°50’S
,
25°50’E
.
Mozambique
:
SAIAB 55601
(1, 287),
Ponta Lipobane
, (
17°00’S
,
92°05’E
)
.
Madagascar
:
UMMZ 185864
(1, 146),
St. Augustin
, near
Tuléar
.
Somalia
:
ANSP 163300
(1, 450),
Ras Hafun
(
10°17’N
,
51°09’E
)
.
Pakistan
:
ANSP 172850
(3, 50–175),
ANSP 172851
(7, 72.6–111.2),
ANSP 172853
(1, 113) and
ANSP 206162
(1, 154),
Sonmiani Bay
near
Hab River
mouth (
24°53’N
,
66°41’E
)
.
India
:
ANSP 152962
(1, 266),
ANSP 153031
(3, 152–171),
ANSP 158305
(1, 191) and
CAS
uncat. (7, 177-284)
Porto Nova
(
11°30’N
,
79°45’E
)
;
CAS-SU 69911
(2, 145–154),
Orissa State
,
Puri
(
19°49’S
,
85°54’E
)
.
Sri Lanka
:
ANSP 148732
(12, 303–475),
ANSP
150961
(1, 366 SL),
ANSP 158304
(1, 130),
ANSP 158499
(5, 188–221),
BPBM 27740
(1, 280),
CAS
16478 (2, 229–231),
CAS 244377
(1, 407),
CAS
uncat. (18, 304–481), sta. FJS 69–59
;
CAS
uncat. (5, 289–483), sta. S-V 69–75;
CAS
uncat. (5, 337–446), sta. S- V 113;
CAS
uncat. (1, 371, sta. PCH 69–207;
CAS
uncat. (2, 334–359), sta.
TI 69–309
;
CAS
uncat. (1, 310), sta.
TI 70–302
.
Myanmar
:
CAS-SU 39573
(1, 161),
Southern Mosco Group
(
14°07’N
,
97°14’E
)
.
Indonesia
:
CSIRO
H 8369-01
(1, 415), W.
Java
,
Pelabuhanratu
(
7°2’N
,
106°32’E
)
.
Western Australia
:
ANSP 153944
(2, 497–558)
Port Quobba
(
24°29’S
,
113°25’E
)
;
WAM
P.26675–007 (1, 172),
Dirk Hartog Island
(
26°08’S
,
113°10’E
)
;
WAM
P.5595–001 (1, 231),
Yanchep
(
31°33’S
,
115°37’E
)
;
WAM
P.24543 (1, 227),
Fremantle
(
32°03’S
,
115°44’E
)
;
WAM
P.702 (1, 279),
Garden Island
(
32°12’S
,
115°40’E
)
.
Diagnosis.
A species of
Trachinotus
in which adults have 3–5 silvery gray (in fresh specimens) oval or vertically oblong spots above or slightly touching lateral line (spots usually absent in specimens <
15 cm
FL); only the first spot positioned above the pectoral fin and several of the larger spots much larger than eye diameter; dorsal fin VI- or VII-I, 22–24; anal-fin II-I, 19–22, rarely 22; vomerine tooth patch round or triangular-shaped and palatine tooth patch relatively short (
Fig. 2A
,
Table 2
). Selected mensural data mostly for specimens>
200 mm
FL are given in
Table 8
and selected measurements are plotted in
Figs. 6–8
.
Comparisons.
Trachinotus botla
is superficially similar to the allopatric
T. coppingeri
but adults differ in having one large spot above the pectoral fin (vs. two spots above lateral line); segmented anal-fin rays 19–22, rarely 22 (vs. 22–24 rays); vomerine tooth patch round or oval-shaped (vs. vomerine tooth patch frequently chevron-shaped,
Table 2
); and ratio of pelvic-fin length to pectoral-fin length greater than in the three other species (
Fig. 8
). Adults of
Trachinotus botla
differ most noticeably from both
T. baillonii
and
T. macrospilus
in having much larger spots on the sides, the largest about equal to or larger than eye diameter (vs. smaller than or only a little larger than iris diameter), and in fresh specimens the spots are silvery gray (vs. black).
Size.
Largest specimen examined
56 cm
FL,
75 cm
TL. The Australian Anglers Association (WA Division) reported a maximum weight of
3.5 kg
for
Trachinotus botla
based on a fish from Quabbo,
Western Australia
, caught in
August 1983
.
Ecology and life-history.
In a study of the biology and life history of
Trachinotus botla
in
South Africa
,
Parker and Booth (2015:251)
stated “it appears to be the only ‘permanent’ surf zone carangid species that completes its entire life cycle inshore.” Based on age determinations from otoliths, these investigators determined that
Trachinotus botla
is a fast-growing and short-lived species. Fish attained
132 mm
FL within two months and the oldest male and female were both six years old and measured 434- and 495-mm FL respectively. Age at 50% sexual maturity was calculated as
247 mm
FL. Spawning season was between November and February. Small fish were restricted to shallow areas of the inshore surf zone and fed predominantly on copepods, small teleosts, and mole crabs. Larger fish fed on mussels, gastropods, and crab megalopae in deeper areas of the surf zone. In
South Africa
45% of
Trachinotus botla
10–35 cm
FL had a large parasitic isopod,
Cymothoa borbonica
Schioedte and Meinert
, attached to the tongue (
Parker and Booth, 2013
). Although the isopod restricts the mouth cavity, damages the basihyal (tongue), and causes a decrease in growth rates, parasitized fish seem to feed effectively.
FIGURE 12.
Trachinotus botla
, ANSP 148732, 343 mm FL, Sri Lanka. Drawn by Tracy D. Pedersen.
Distribution.
(
Fig. 13
)
South Africa
(Algoa
Bay
), to
Somalia
,
Madagascar
, Gulf of
Oman
to
Pakistan
,
India
,
Sri Lanka
and
Myanmar
, and south to
Indonesia
(
West Java
, Pelabuhanratu) and Western Australia. All records of
T. botla
from
Papua New Guinea
and
New Britain
(
Munro, 1956
,
1967
) apparently are based on misidentifications of
T. baillonii
; however,
Munro’s (1967
, pl. 26, fig. 393) drawing of
Trachinotus russelli
appears to be a slight modification of previously published ones of
T. coppingeri
based on New South Wales specimens. The four “Fairwind” specimens available from
New Britain
(
CSIRO
C176, Jacquinot Bay and C1053, Pulie) and
Papua New Guinea
(
CSIRO
C241, Woodlark Island) and (
CSIRO
C868, Daugo Island) collected during
1948 and 1950
are all
T. baillonii
.
FIGURE 13.
Distributions of
Trachinotus botla
and
T. coppingeri
. Solid symbols indicate specimens examined; open symbols acceptable literature records.
Etymology.
The specific epithet
botla
is based on the common name used by native people in
India
for fishes during the early 1800s.
Nomenclatural history
.
Shaw’s (1803)
Scomber botla
, a composite species, was based primarily on
Russell’s (1803)
plate 142 of “botla parah” from Vizagapatam,
India
, here reproduced as
Fig. 14
. When an original description relates to more than one taxon the availability of a name is not affected (Article 17 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature,
ICZN
1999
). In his brief original description Shaw referred to two of Russell’s plates, with plate 142 clearly referable to
Trachinotus botla
and plate 137 to the carangid now known as
Scomberoides commersonnianus
Lacepède. In
contrast to plate 142, Shaw preceded his reference to plate 137 by a question mark indicating uncertainty about their conspecificity although his text description included characters of both genera. In the original description of
Trachinotus russelii
(misspelling of Russell), Cuvier in
Cuvier and Valenciennes (1832:436)
did not mention Shaw’s earlier description (perhaps unaware of it) but cited Russell’s plate 142 indicating that it was a drawing of his new species, hence adoption of the patronym.
Day (1875)
also recognized
T. russelii
as a senior synonym, as did
Weber and de Beaufort (1931:289)
. In a footnote the latter authors specifically rejected Shaw’s name based on the composite nature of the description; other authors followed that opinion or unquestionably adopted Cuvier’s name. In contrast,
Ogilby (1915:95)
concluded that Shaw’s name has priority over
T. russelii
Cuvier
because both descriptions were based on the same Russell figure. All Australian ichthyologists have followed Ogilby in recognizing
Trachinotus botla
as a senior synonym of
T. russelii
and since the 1980s most authors who published on Indo-West Pacific
Trachinotus
have done likewise (see synonymy).
According to Fricke
et al
. (2019) no types of
T. botla
are known. In view of the above nomenclatural inconsistency and following qualifying conditions of Article 75.3 of the Code (
ICZN
, 1999
), we designate
CAS-SU
14445 as the
neotype
(
Fig. 15
) of
Scomber botla
Shaw. This
342 mm
FL (
316 mm
SL) specimen was obtained from Vizagapatam,
India
, by A.W. Herre in 1940 (no exact date). The specimen has dorsal fin VII-I, 22, anal fin II-I, 20, developed gill rakers 6+12, and vomerine and palatine tooth pattern type A. The two largest body spots on the left side are 33.6 and
30.2 mm
in height and the eye diameter is 18.0 mm. The following measurements are given as percent FL: dorsal-fin lobe height 41.5, anal-fin lobe height 44.5, pectoral-fin length 16.7, and pelvic-fin length 10.0; ratio pectoral/pelvic = 1.7.