Mitochondrial DNA-based reassessment of Antennablennius Fowler (Blenniidae: Salariini) from the north-western Indian Ocean, with resurrection of A. persicus (Regan)
Author
Estekani, Sanaz
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran.
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
Station of Naturalists, Omsk, Russia. & Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum, Department of Marine Zoology, Ichthyology Section, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Author
Zajonz, Uwe
Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum, Department of Marine Zoology, Ichthyology Section, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Author
Hundt, Peter J.
Bell Museum of Natural History, University of Minnesota, 2088 Larpenteur Ave., St Paul, MN 55113, USA.
Author
Siahsarvie, Roohollah
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran. & Rodentology Research Department, Institute of Applied Zoology, Faculty of Sciences, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran.
Author
Aliabadian, Mansour
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran. & Research Department of Zoological Innovations, Institute of Applied Zoology, Faculty of Science, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran.
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-09-02
5501
3
425
446
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5501.3.2
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5501.3.2
1175-5326
13628137
C1945D43-6643-40D5-9242-65C7B2A9DA98
Antennablennius australis
Fraser-Brunner, 1951
Moustache Blenny
Figure 5
,
Table 3
Antennablennius australis
Fraser-Brunner, 1951: 218
(
Mozambique
, Delagoa Bay, Inyak;
holotype
: BMNH 1920.12.6.24)—
Bath 1983: 50
(Red Sea, Dahlak Archipelago);
Randall 1995: 313
, Fig. 881 (southern Oman).
Antennablennius bifilum
(non Günther)—
Tortonese 1975: 185
(Gulf of
Aden
).
Description.
Dorsal-fin rays XII,16–18 (usually 17); anal-fin rays II,16–19 (usually 17 or 18); pectoral-fin rays 14; body deep for the genus, its depth 4.0–5.0 in SL; lateral line ending below dorsal-fin spine V-VII; nasal cirrus projecting downward, usually reaching mouth; a pair of short cirri on nape; no crest on head; 26–30 teeth in upper jaw and
23–28 in
lower; dorsal fin moderately notched between spinous and soft portions (slightly more than half the length of first soft ray). Size: Reaches
8.3 cm
.
Coloration
(
Fig. 5
). Pale yellowish anteriorly, grading to white ventrally, with indistinct oblique dark brown bars, progressively less oblique posteriorly, becoming vertical at origin of soft portion of dorsal fin, then narrowing to midlateral blotches posteriorly; vertical pale yellow lines across body posterior to pectoral fins, becoming more irregular posteriorly and breaking into small spots ventrally; brown bars with pale green vertical lines, pale yellowish interspaces with yellowish brown lines; posterior part of body with a lateral row of irregular interconnected brown blotches with white lines, numerous close-set white spots or vermiculations dorsally and small white spots ventrally; spinous portion of dorsal fin mainly dark brown, with two broad curving pale yellow bands, and soft portion pale green, with light yellow rays and four large black blotches at base, in alignment with brown bars of body, rays passing through them pale green; anal and caudal fin pale greenish yellow, caudal-fin rays narrowly barred, anal fin with a blackish margin anteriorly.
Distribution and habitat.
Reported from the southern Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and southern coast of
Oman
, south along east coast of Africa to
South Africa
(
Eastern Cape Province
) and
Madagascar
(
Bath 1983
;
Randall 1995
;
Fricke
et al
. 2018
). The
Oman
and Red Sea specimens were collected from tidepools.
Remarks.
Relatively rare species in the north-western part of the Indian Ocean where
Bath (1983)
reported the
Red Sea
record from ten specimens collected in the Dahlak Archipelago,
Eritrea
, and
Randall (1995)
collected
two specimens
from the southern
Oman
.
Tortonese (1975)
reported
five specimens
from the Gulf of Aden identifying them as
A. bifilum
. However, the length of nape cirri (“about as long as eye diameter”) and the anal-fin ray count (II,17) correspond closer to
A. australis
.
Material examined
(n=2).
Red Sea
,
Eritrea
, Dahlak Archipelago:
SMF
36382,
39.6 mm
SL;
SMF
36383,
38.7 mm
SL.