Synopsis of the Grenadier Fishes (Gadiformes; Teleostei) of Taiwan
Author
Iwamoto, Tomio
Section of Ichthyology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA;
Author
Nakayama, Naohide
Laboratory of Marine Biology, Faculty of Science, Kochi University, 2 - 5 - 1 Akebono-cho, Kochi, 780 - 8073, Japan;
Author
Shao, Kwang-Tsao
Research Center for Biodiversity, Academia Sinica No. 128, Sec. 2, Academia Road, Nankang, Taipei 115, Taiwan;
Author
Table, Hsuan-Ching Ho
text
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences
2015
2015-04-15
62
3
31
126
journal article
299670
10.5281/zenodo.11512126
522b8de7-880d-40ca-803e-aa5a3a05c5f6
0068-547X
11512126
Malacocephalus nipponensis
Gilbert and Hubbs, 1916
Malacocephalus nipponensis
Gilbert and Hubbs, 1916:189–191
, pl. 9, fig. 2 (
holotype
,
USNM
76866, 460 mm
TL; e. coast
Japan
,
Albatross
st. 4967, 244–253 fm [
446–463 m
].— Okamura
in
Okamura et al., 1982:145
, 347, fig. 88 (p. 144) (
1 spec.
,
472 mm
TL, Kyushu-Palau Ridge,
453 m
).— Okamura
in
Masuda et al., 1984:94
, pl. 80–J (compiled).— Okamura
in
Okamura et al., 1984:144
, 360, fig. 145 (p. 202) (
18 spec.
,
270–480 mm
TL, East
China
Sea [Okinawa Trough],
420–550 m
).—
Shen et al., 1993:172
(descr.).—
Chiou et al., 2004b:37
, 47 (in key, list).—
Shao et al., 2008
: table 2 (
2 spec.
,
Taiwan
[
SCS
],
979–1268 m
, first record for Taiwan).
Malacocephalus laevis
:
Okamura, 1970:69–73
, pl. IV, text-fig. 29–31(
56 spec.
,
255–520 mm
TL; Pacific coast of s.
Japan
,
350–500 m
).—
Shao et al., 2008
: table 2 (
9 spec.
,
NET
,
ET
,
SWT
).
MATERIAL
EXAMINED
(
20 spec.
).—
NET
:
ASIZP 60015
(1, 445 TL),
Da-xi
;
ASIZP 61312
(1, 336 TL; Nan-fang-ao
;
ASIZP 61313
(3, 184–252 TL), Nan-fang-ao
;
ASIZP 65517
(1, 68 HL, 405 TL), CD 210
;
ASIZP 70229
(1, 287 TL),
Da-xi
.
SWT
:
ASIZP 61314
(1, 172 TL),
Dong-gang
;
ASIZP 62331
(2, 250+-305+ TL),
Fong-gang
,
200 m
;
ASIZP 65517
(1, 405 TL), CD 210, 445–
1185 m
;
ASIZP 65597
(2, 360–370 TL), CD 137, 316–
477 m
;
ASIZP 70615
(1, 196 TL),
Dong-gang
).
SCS
:
ASIZP 58031
(2, 361–389 TL),
Tong-sa Islands
);
ASIZP 66277
(1, 220+ TL), OCP
312, 517 m
;
ASIZP 66745
(1, 178+ TL), CP
314, 506 m
;
FRIP 0669
(1, 302 TL)
,
FRI
,
630 m
;
NMMSTP 0907 (1, 290+ TL),
Tong-sha Islands
,
515 m
.
DISTINGUISHING
FEATURES
.— 1D II,10–14; P i16–i22;
V
9 (8–10); inner GR-I 2–4+7–9; pyl. caeca 107–130. Snout 23–28%; orbit 29–37%; suborbital 11–14%; interorbital 26–31%; orbit-preopercle 42–50%; upper jaw 45–56%; barbel 18–22%. Snout bluntly pointed; mouth large, upper jaw extends to below hind margin of orbit; orbit large, greater than snout length; suborbital region vertical and smoothly curved; gill openings wide, extend forward to under posterior margin of orbit. Scales small, beset with fine, slender spinules; scales uniformly and smoothly cover head and body; no coarsely modified scales on ridges of head or tip of snout, lower branchiostegal rays scaled, but gular membrane naked. Light organ with anterior dermal window relatively small and round, situated between or slightly anterior to
V
bases; periproct enclosing posterior dermal window and urogenital openings located between
V
fins, far removed from A origin. Coloration gray to swarthy with silvery sides, blackish ventrally on head and over abdomen; fins dark dusky to black. Attains>
520 mm
TL. (Mostly after
Okamura 1970
and from
Taiwan
specimens.)
DISTRIBUTION
.— Pacific coast of s.
Japan
, East
China
Sea [Okinawa Trough], Kyushu-Palau Ridge, and
Taiwan
off ne., sw. coast and in South
China
Sea in
316–1185 m
.
REMARKS
.—
Malacocephalus nipponensis
was first synonymized into
M. laevis
Lowe, 1843
by
Okamura (1970)
, but later (Okamura
in
Okamura and Kitajima 1982; Okamura
in
Okamura et al. 1984
) considered it a valid species based on the absence of scales on the gular membrane (usually present in
M. laevis
) and the small round anterior dermal window (bean-shaped in
M. laevis
).
Iwamoto (1979:149)
suggested that
M. laevis
,
M. nipponensis
, and
M. hawaiiensis
Gilbert,
1905 may
eventually prove to be the same. Although specimens of this species are available in many collections around the world, no one has yet to comprehensively study these collections. A molecular study may prove the easiest and the most-effective approach to resolving this question of how many species are involved in this clade. We have taken a conservative approach and treat these northwestern Pacific specimens as
M. nipponensis
, following Okamura.