Parrotfishes (Teleostei: Labridae: Scarini) of the Socotra Archipelago: Diversity and distributional biogeography, including a range extension of Scarus zufar Randall & Hoover, 1995
Author
Zajonz, Uwe
Senckenberg Research Institute and Museum of Nature (SMF), Marine Zoology-Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
Senckenberg Research Institute and Museum of Nature (SMF), Marine Zoology-Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany. & Station of Naturalists, Omsk, Russia.
Author
Saeed, Fouad K. N.
Senckenberg Research Institute and Museum of Nature (SMF), Marine Zoology-Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany. & Environmental Protection Authority, Socotra Branch, Hadibo, Yemen.
Author
Aideed, Moteah S.
Senckenberg Research Institute and Museum of Nature (SMF), Marine Zoology-Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany. & Maritime Affairs Authority, Mukalla, Yemen.
Author
Lavergne, Edouard
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-12-20
5389
3
301
330
https://mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5389.3.1/52519
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5389.3.1
1175-5326
10410051
3E7237B4-85C5-4581-B469-ED1C00154413
Chlorurus sordidus
(Forsskål, 1775)
Scarus sordidus
Forsskål
in
Niebuhr, 1775: 30
;
neotype
:
USNM 202297
; type locality:
Red Sea
.
Bullethead Parrotfish
Figure 2
Material examined:
Underwater photograph.
Distinctive characters:
Body depth
2.3–2.5 in
SL; front of head strongly rounded, the dorsal and ventral profiles about equally convex; teeth fully fused to form dental plates, mostly exposed, less than one-half covered by lips; cutting edge of dental plates distinctly denticulate; posterior nostril as large as anterior nostril; caudal fin truncate to slightly emarginate. Meristic values: Pectoral-fin rays 14; median predorsal scales 4, first largest; cheek with 2 scale rows, lower row with 5–8 scales.
Colouration
: Initial phase dark reddish brown with two rows of whitish spots on side of body; caudal peduncle paler than body, usually with a faint blackish spot at caudal-fin base; dorsal fin dark reddish brown. Terminal males usually mainly green with lavender-pink scale edges, caudal peduncle distinctly lighter than body; head with green interorbital area and nape, two short green bands radiating from eye and green stripe or blotch below eye that bifurcating into two, edged ventrally with pink, stripes to upper lip and to chin; usually a diffuse yellowish area beneath dorsal half of pectoral fins.
Distribution:
Red Sea along eastern Africa south to
South Africa
(
KwaZulu-Natal
),
Madagascar
and the Mascarene Islands, east to the Andaman Sea and western
Indonesia
. Known from the entire
Arabian
region from the Red Sea along
Arabian
Peninsula to the
Arabian
/Persian Gulf (
Randall & Bruce 1983
; Randall 1995;
Lips
et al
. 2016
).
Remarks:
The photographed terminal male matches the description of
Chlorurus sordidus
given by
Randall & Bruce (1983)
and Randall (1995), supporting the record of
Zajonz
et al
. (2019)
. The species occurs at all islands of the Archipelago on seaward coral-dominated habitats at depths of
4–15 m
, though it is rare. The photographed individual was observed at Samha Island in an area with soft corals at
10 m
depth. Terminal males from the
Red Sea
and Gulf of
Aden
, in contrast to males from the Indian Ocean, possess a broad pink or pinkish orange zone across cheek and lack green bands radiating from the eye.