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1.
J Fish Biol ; 104(3): 737-745, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37961001

ABSTRACT

A new species of the ophichthid eel of the family Ophichthidae is described based on five specimens collected from the Mudasalodai fish landing center, off Cuddalore coast, southeast coast of India, Bay of Bengal. Ophichthus naevius sp. nov. is distinguished from its congeners by having a unique color pattern: dorsal body with numerous dense dark spots or patches, ventral body pale yellowish green, dorsal-fin origin just before pectoral-fin tip, vertebral formula: 12-14/52-53/134-138, and teeth on jaw uniserial and pointed. The study also reports the range extension and molecular evidence of Ophichthus chilkensis from South India. Molecular analyses were performed for both species, and their phylogenetic relationship suggests that the new species exhibits 10.2% genetic divergence with its congener Ophichthus sangjuensis, followed by Ophichthus brevicaudatus (10.4%), and Ophichthus sp. 1 (11.8%) also forms the closest clade in both Bayesian inference and maximum likelihood (ML) tree. Similarly, according to the topology of the ML tree, the species O. chilkensis forms a clade with Ophichthus sp. 5, Ophichthus remiger, Ophichthus frontalis, Ophichthus sp. 6, and Ophichthus rex, suggesting that it would be the genetically closest congener.


Subject(s)
Bays , Eels , Animals , Eels/genetics , Phylogeny , Bayes Theorem , India
2.
J Fish Biol ; 103(1): 130-135, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37177865

ABSTRACT

A new species of the genus Macrocephenchelys is described herein based on a single specimen collected from the deep-sea trawl landing at Kalamukku fish landing centre, Kerala coast, Arabian Sea. The new species is distinguished by having a dorsal-fin origin behind the middle of pectoral fin, a larger head, shorter trunk, larger gill opening, dorsal surface of body with dark-brown colour and ventral surface of head and belly with numerous patches of melanophores before anus, vertebrae 14-30-151. The new species shares most of the characteristics with Macrocephenchelys brevirostris but differs from it by having a more anterior dorsal-fin origin (vs. over the tip or slightly behind the pectoral-fin tip), larger head [15.3% total length (TL) vs. 10.5%-13.9% TL, 53.2% pre-anal length (PAL) vs. 35.8%-47.6% PAL], shorter trunk length (13.6% TL vs. 14.4%-20.6% TL, 47.3% PAL vs. 52.4%-66.2% PAL); further it shows 7.9%-8.1% genetic divergence from the sequences of M. brevirostris.


Subject(s)
Eels , Fishes , Animals , Gills , Spine , Melanophores
3.
Zootaxa ; 5244(5): 474-484, 2023 Feb 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37044448

ABSTRACT

A new species of Conger eel is described from a single specimen (569 mm total length) collected off Kanyakumari, Southwest coast of India, Arabian Sea. The following characters distinguish the new species from other congeners: dorsal-fin origin behind the pectoral-fin tip; head larger, 18.5% TL; longer predorsal length 24.0% TL; relatively shorter trunk, uniserial teeth at the posterior end of vomerine patch; body blackish to dark brown; pectoral fin completely darker; cephalic pores rim whitish; SO pores 3; IO pores 6; pectoral rays 19; total vertebrae 141+. Genetic analysis of the mitochondrial COI gene revealed that the new species is closely related to Conger verreauxi Kaup, 1856 and Conger macrocephalus Kanazawa, 1958, with a genetic divergence of 5.7% and 5.9% respectively.


Subject(s)
Eels , Head , Animals , Eels/genetics , India , Spine
4.
J Fish Biol ; 102(5): 1245-1252, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36880271

ABSTRACT

A new species of deep-water conger eel, Rhynchoconger bicoloratus sp. nov., is described herein based on three specimens collected from the deep-sea trawlers landing at Kalamukku fishing harbour, off Kochi, Arabian Sea, from a depth beyond 200 m. The new species is distinguished from its congeners by having the following combination of characters: head larger than trunk, rictus at posterior margin of pupil, dorsal fin origin slightly before the pectoral fin insertion, eye diameter 1.7-1.9 times in snout length, ethmovomerine teeth patch broader than long with 41-44 recurved pointed teeth in six or seven rows, vomerine teeth patch pentagonal shaped with single tooth on posterior end, 35 pre-anal vertebrae, body bicoloured, peritoneum and stomach black. Genetically, the new species differs from its congeners with a divergence of 12.9%-20.1% in the mitochondrial COI gene.


Subject(s)
Eels , Water , Animals , Eels/genetics , Head , India , Spine
5.
PeerJ ; 10: e14258, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36389433

ABSTRACT

A new species of the genus Pangasius, is described based on 17 specimens collected from the Cauvery River, India. It can be distinguished from its sister species from South and Southeast Asia, by its widely placed, small and rounded vomerine and palatine tooth plates, longer maxillary and mandibular barbels, greater vertebrae count 50 (vs. 44-48), and smaller caudal peduncle depth (6.5-8.2% SL vs. 9.89-13.09% SL). The tooth plates of the new species closely resembles that of Pangasius macronema but can be clearly distinguished from the latter by having lesser gill rakers (16-19 vs. 36-45); a smaller eye (2.4-4.4% SL vs. 5.2-9.6% SL); and larger adipose-fin base (1.5-2.9% SL vs. 0.1-1.2% SL). The mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COI) gene sequence of the new species shows the genetic divergence of 3.5% and 5.1% from P. pangasius and P. silasi respectively, the two sister species found in South Asia and India. The species delimitation approaches, Poisson Tree Processes (PTP) and assemble species by automatic partitioning (ASAP) clearly resolved that the P. icaria is distinct from its sister species. Phylogenetic position of the species with its sister species was evaluated using maximum likelihood and Bayesian analysis. The discovery of this previously unknown species of genus Pangasius from the Cauvery River of peninsular India indicates important biogeographical insight that this genus migrated till the southern division of Western Ghats.


Subject(s)
Catfishes , Cyprinidae , Animals , Rivers , Phylogeny , Bayes Theorem , India
6.
J Fish Biol ; 100(6): 1447-1454, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35415845

ABSTRACT

Ariosoma indicum sp. nov. is described herein based on 12 specimens [(335-433 mm total length (TL)] collected off the Arabian Sea of southwest coast of India and 7 specimens from Digha Mohana, off the Bay of Bengal of northeast coast of India. The new species is distinguished from congeners in having the following combination of the characters: anus positioned anterior to middle of total length, pre-anal length 40.0%-43.1% of TL; short wedge-shaped pointed vomerine teeth patch, three or four rows in anterior portion, tapering posteriorly with four uniserial teeth; supraorbital canal with four or five pores; pre-dorsal vertebrae 9-10; pre-anal vertebrae 49-53; total vertebrae 141-146; body greenish-brown in colour; extremities of the lower jaw with minute dark pigmentation patches before the rictus, bicoloured pectoral fin. A. indicum shares few characters with the Indian water species, Ariosoma gnanadossi, but readily differs from the latter in having more pre-anal vertebrae (49-53 vs. 47 in A. gnanadossi); fewer lateral-line pores (130-137 vs. 145); shorter tail (54.9%-57.9% TL vs. 60.1% TL); smaller eye (15.1%-17.7% HL vs. 19.2% HL); smaller interorbital width (11.8%-15.7% HL vs. 18.2% HL); longer upper jaw (26.9%-30.2% HL vs. 19.2% HL). In addition, molecular analysis using partial mitochondrial COI gene suggests that A. indicum is genetically closer to Ariosoma maurostigma and Ariosoma melanospilos with a divergence of 15.0% and 15.8%, respectively, and forms a well-supported monophyletic clade.


Subject(s)
Eels , Head , Animals , India , Pigmentation , Spine
7.
J Fish Biol ; 100(3): 775-782, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35107172

ABSTRACT

A new congrid eel species, Ariosoma maurostigma sp. nov., is described on the basis of 24 specimens collected from the deep-sea trawl by-catch, Kalamukku Fishing Harbour, off Kerala, Arabian Sea. The new species differs from all other congeners in having the following combination of characters: dark mark or spot on the posterodorsal margin of the eyes; dorsal surface of head with two faint darkish bands across the anterior and posterior margin of the eye; origin of the dorsal fin before the pectoral-fin base; short vomerine teeth patch, ST pores 3, 1 median pore and 1 lateral pore on each side just behind the median pore; preanal vertebrae 47-51; precaudal vertebrae 54-57; total vertebrae 136-142; total pores 129-134. The phylogenetic analysis reveals that the new species is closely related to Ariosoma melanospilos and Ariosoma anale, with divergences of 13.8% and 14.9%, respectively.


Subject(s)
Eels , Spine , Animals , Eye , India , Phylogeny
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