The taxonomic identity of the monocle bream Scolopsis vosmeri species complex (Perciformes: Nemipteridae), with comments on molecular phylogenetic relationships within the genus Scolopsis
Author
Russell, Barry C.
Museum & Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, PO Box 4646, Darwin NT 0801, Australia. & School of Environmental and Life Sciences, Charles Darwin University, PO Box 40146, Casuarina NT 0811, Australia. Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt a. M., Germany. Tilman. Alpermann @ senckenberg. de; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8723 - 4576
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
0000-0002-8723-4576
Station of Naturalists, Omsk, Russia.
lpermann@senckenberg.de
Author
Mal, Ahmad O.
Marine Biology Department, Faculty of Marine Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Marine Biology Department, Faculty of Marine Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah Saudi Arabia.
Author
Bineesh, K. K.
0000-0001-9775-018X
Andaman and Nicobar Regional Centre, Zoological Survey of India, Port Blair- 744102, Andaman Islands, India. kkbineesh @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 9775 - 018 X
kkbineesh@gmail.com
Author
Alpermann, Tilman J.
0000-0002-8723-4576
lpermann@senckenberg.de
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-03-07
5105
4
501
538
journal article
20321
10.11646/zootaxa.5105.4.3
75a36a22-3d52-4649-8f77-25a47110f692
1175-5326
6333936
09027BC7-79FA-4D0A-B7DE-B9965A7887A6
Genus
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814
Ghanan
(subgenus of
Sciaena
)
Forsskål, 1775: 44
(Vernacular name only, not available. Synonym of
Scolopsis
Cuvier 1814
—
Kottelat 2013b: 349
).
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814: 90
(
type
species
Scolopsis curite
Cuvier, 1815: 361
, by subsequent monotypy, the name
curite
available by indication to
Russell 1803: 5
, pl. 106. ‘Kurite’; Vizagapatam [Visakhapatnam],
India
).
Scolopsides
Cuvier, 1829: 178
(
type
species
Scolopsides kurita
Cuvier, 1829: 178
, by subsequent designation in
Jordan
1917: 128
; the name
kurita
available by reference to
Russell 1803: 5
, pl. 106, ‘Kurite’. The generic name
Scolopsides
mistakenly regarded as an incorrect subsequent spelling of
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814
by
Kottelat 2013b: 349
).
Lycogenis
Cuvier
(ex Kuhl & van Hasselt) in
Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1830: 346
(not available, based on
Lycogenis argyrosoma
Kuhl & Van Hasselt
—genus and species name in synonymy of
Scolopsides lycogenis
Cuvier, 1830
. Synonym of
Scolopsis
Cuvier 1814
—
Kottelat 2013b: 349
).
Ctenoscolopsis
Fowler, 1931: 273
, 300 (subgenus of
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814
;
type
species
Holocentrus ciliatus
Lacepède, 1802: 333
, 367, by original designation).
Diagnosis.
Small to medium-sized fishes with a slender or moderately deep, laterally compressed body. Teeth villiform or small and conical, in tapering bands in both jaws; canine teeth absent. Gill rakers short and stubby, 8–12 on first arch. Pectoral fins short to moderately long, with 2 unbranched and 12–17 branched rays; second anal-fin spine usually longer and more robust than first or third; caudal fin emarginate or forked; upper lobe and/or lower lobe of caudal fin pointed, falcate or produced to form short filamentous extensions. Body covered with ctenoid scales; scales on top of head reaching forward to level of middle of eyes, to level of nostrils, or to in front of nostrils; suborbital naked, with a large backwardly pointing spine and a series of smaller spines or serrations on its posterior margin; a small antrorse spine beneath eye in some species; 4–7 transverse rows of cheek scales, lower limb of preopercle naked or scaly; posterior margin of preopercle serrate or spinous; opercle scaly; posterior margin of opercle with a small, flat embedded spine. Lateral line with 35–49 scales, 3–5½ transverse scale rows above lateral line, and 12–18 rows below. Color: extremely variable.
Scolopsis
is distinct from all other nemipterid genera in having the suborbital (second infraorbital) with a large retrorse pointed spine, and sometimes a smaller antrorse spine also presents on third infraorbital, immediately above suborbital spine.
Remarks.
The first use of the name
Scolopsis
is that of
Cuvier (1814: 90)
, who distinguished his new genus from
Anthias
Bloch, 1792
by having spines on the suborbital and preopercle: “Un genre
SCOLOPSIS
, qu'il établit, comprend des espèces nouvelles qui, outre les dentelures de la préopercule, en ont aussi, et même d'épineuses, aux sous-orbitaires.” [A genus
SCOLOPSIS
, is established, which includes new species that, besides the serrations of the preopercule, also have spines on the suborbitals].
Subsequently,
Cuvier (1815: 361)
referred to the genus
Scolopsis
, by indication to
Russell (1803
, vol 2: 5, pl. 106) who used the local vernacular name ‘Kurite’ to describe and illustrated a species of
Scolopsis
from Vizagapatam [Visakhapatnam],
India
: “J’en fais un petite genre sous le nom de
SCOLOPSIS
. Tel est le
curite
de
Russel
, poiss. de Coramandel, II, 106.” [I make a small genus under the name
Scolopsis
. This is the
curite
of
Russel
[sic], fishes of Coromandel, II, 106]. Later, in a footnote in the first edition of
Le Regne Animal
,
Cuvier (1816: 280)
states “Les espèces m’en paraissent nouvelles, Aj. [Ajoutez] le
kurite
, Russ.
corom. II, cvi;—
botche
, ib.[ibid.] cv.” [These species seem new to me, including the
kurite
, Russell
[fishes of] Coromandel II, 106;—
botche
, ibid. 105].
It is questionable whether the use of the name ‘
curite
’ by
Cuvier (1815)
, and his subsequent reference to ‘
kurite
’ (
Cuvier 1816
) should be regarded as vernacular rather than scientific (
Kottelat 2013b
). However, we consider Cuvier’s use of the name
curite
(and its alternative spelling
kurite
) to be a clear reference to
Russell’s (1803)
description and a latinisation of the local Telugu language name ‘Kurite’. We therefore regard
Scolopsis curite
Cuvier, 1815
to be the oldest available binomen for Russell’s species, and thus the
type
species of
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814
by subsequent monotypy.
As pointed out by
Kottelat (2013b)
, not accepting
Scolopsis curite
as available from
Cuvier (1815)
would create a number of serious nomenclatural problems, not the least of which is that the
type
species of
Scolopsis
would then be
Scolopsis sayanus
Gilliams, 1824
(p. 81, pl. 3), by subsequent monotypy, and this would make
Scolopsis
a senior synonym of
Aphredoderus
Lesueur
in
Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1833
, the North American freshwater pirate perch (family
Aphredoderidae
). Cuvier in
Cuvier & Valenciennes (1830: 328)
recognized this dilemma, stating: “Il est nécessaire de faire remarquer ici que l'on ne peut pas laisser dans ce genre le
Scolopsis sayanus
de M. Gilliams
qui a des dents au palais, et dont les sous- orbitaires, comme le préopercule, ne paraissent être que dentelés et non épineux.” [It is necessary to remark here that one cannot leave in this genus the
Scolopsis sayanus
of M. Gilliams, which has teeth on the palate, and whose suborbitals, like the preopercule, appear to be only serrated and not spinous]; with Valenciennes in
Cuvier & Valenciennes (1833: 448)
later assigning
Scolopsis sayanus
to the genus
Aphredoderu
s.
The generic name
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814
was subsequently used by
Cuvier (1815
,
1816
) and by Cuvier in
Cuvier & Valenciennes (1828: 222)
. However, in the second edition of
Le Regne Animal
,
Cuvier (1829: 178)
inexplicably proposed a new generic name,
Scolopsides
, including (in a footnote) the following species: “
Scol. kate
, Nob.
, nommé par Bloch
Anthias japonicus
, 325, f. 2;—
Anth. Vosmeri
, Bl.
, 321, figure très pen exact, et la même que
Perca aurata
, Mungo Park., Trans. Lin., III
, 35;—
Anth. bilineatus
, Bl.
, 325, 1;—
Scol. lycogenis
, Nob.
, ou Holocentre cilié, Lacép., IV, 371;—
Sciaena ghanam
, Forsk
, et plusiers especès nouvelles”.
Kottelat (2013b: 349)
considered
Scolopsides
Cuvier, 1829
to be simply an incorrect subsequent spelling of
Scolopsis
Cuvier, 1814
. However, the unambiguous and consistent use of the name
Scolopsides
by Cuvier in Volume 3 of the
Histoire naturelle des poissons
(Cuvier in
Cuvier & Valenciennes 1830: 527
) as well as in contemporary works by others (e.g.,
Bennett 1832
;
Richardson 1846
;
Bleeker 1849
,
1852
,
1855
; Thiollière in
Montrouzier 1857
) provides no evidence for any such lapsus. Regardless, the name
Scolopsis
also continued in prevailing use (
Richardson 1842
;
Günther 1859
,
1872
;
Playfair & Günther 1867
;
Kner 1868
;
Bleeker 1873
, 1876-77,
Peters 1877
;
De Vis 1882
,
1884
;
Ramsay & Ogilby 1886
;
Evermann & Seale 1907
;
Jordan
& Seale 1907
;
Jordan
& Richardson 1909
;
Weber 1913
;
Whitley 1937
;
Akazaki 1962
, and all recent authors), and we accept
Scolopsis
here as the oldest valid available name for this taxon.
Etymology
.
Scolopsis
(fem.) is derived from the Greek masc. noun
skolos
(thorn) and suffix -
opsis
(from Gr. fem. n.
opsis
—aspect, appearance), meaning ‘thorny appearance’ presumably in reference to “les dentelures de la préopercule, en ont aussi, et même d'épineuses, aux sous-orbitaires” mentioned by
Cuvier (1814)
in his designation of the genus. Names ending in -
opsis
are treated as feminine (
ICZN 1999
: Article 30.1.2).