Anatomical investigation of the slender catshark Schroederichthys tenuis Springer, 1966, with notes on intrageneric relationships (Chondrichthyes: Carcharhiniformes: Scyliorhinidae).
Author
Ulisses L. Gomes
Author
Gerhard O. Peters
Author
Marcelo R. de Carvalho
Author
Otto B. F. Gadig
text
Zootaxa
2006
1119
29
58
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:05BB8E49-F524-4BA3-AD71-5AA92862EABC
journal article
z01119p029
[[ Genus
Schroederichthys Springer
]]
Sharks of the genus
Schroederichthys
Springer, 1966 are small to medium-sized catsharks (Scyliorhinidae) restricted to temperate and tropical waters of South and Central America, occurring on the continental shelf and upper slope (Compagno, 1984, 1988). The genus
was
described for
Schroederichthys maculatus
(type-species) and
S. tenuis
, two small and strongly attenuated species that differed from other scyliorhinids in having a greatly elongated postpelvic trunk region and well developed upper and lower labial folds (Springer, 1966). Adults of
S. maculatus
were abundant but unknown for
S. tenuis
, for which only two specimens existed for almost 20 years since its original description and Springer’s (1979) subsequent review of the Scyliorhinidae. A third specimen, an immature male 260 mm in total length, was finally collected off Suriname in waters 72 m deep (Uyeno and Sasaki, 1983). Springer’s original specimens measured 230 and 180 mm total length (holotype and paratype, respectively) and were also immature males, captured off the mouth of the Amazon River in 410 m (Springer, 1966).
Springer (1979) expanded
Schroederichthys
to include the South American
Scyllium bivium
Smith, 1838 and
Scyllium chilense
Guichenot, 1848, two species that were previously assigned to either
Scyliorhinus
Blainville, 1816 (Regan, 1908; Norman, 1937) or the Indo-Pacific genus
Halaelurus
Gill, 1862 (Garman, 1913; Springer, 1966; Kato et al., 1967; Gosztonyi, 1973; Menni et al., 1979). Springer’s (1979) reallocation of these species was based on the observation that newly hatched individuals of
Halaelurus bivius
were as attenuated as both species of
Schroederichthys
. In addition, Springer was informed that an unreported adult specimen of
Schroederichthys tenuis
from southeastern Brazil in the ISH collection in Hamburg differed from adult
S. maculatus
in not being attenuated (pers. comm. from the late G Krefft; Springer, 1979), which further corroborated the assignment of
H. bivius
and
H. chilensis
to
Schroederichthys
, and led Compagno (1984) to deduce that the tapered adult body of
S. maculatus
was neotenic. The ISH/Hamburg
Schroederichthys
specimen was examined by one of us (MRC) in 1996 and identified as a new species of
Schroederichthys
, which is now referred to
S. saurisqualus
Soto, 2003 [1].
New specimens of
S. tenuis
appeared only in 1991 when one male and two females were collected from off the coast of
Amapa
State (northern Brazil) at 450 m (Gomes and de Carvalho, 1995; Gadig et al., 1996; Gadig, 2001). These specimens contained in their stomachs small teleosts and benthic invertebrates, and represented the first adult specimens of
S. tenuis
. One of the females was pregnant and contained a single egg capsule in each uterus (Gomes and de Carvalho, 1995). More importantly, these adults have highly tapered bodies and are as attenuated as juveniles of
S. tenuis
and juveniles and adults of
S. maculatus
.
The present study reports nine additional specimens of
S. tenuis
from off
Para
State,
northern
Brazil, caught during exploratory fisheries surveys of its continental slope by the Brazilian Federal REVIZEE program. Our objectives here are to describe and illustrate the skeleton and other morphological features of this rare species, based on mature and immature individuals, and compare them with congeners. Some comments on species relationships within
Schroederichthys
are also provided, anticipating results of work still in progress (de Carvalho and Gomes, in prep.).