Neocyema
Neocyema | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Order: | Anguilliformes |
Family: | Neocyematidae |
Genus: | Neocyema Castle, 1978 |
Species: | N. erythrosoma |
Binomial name | |
Neocyema erythrosoma |
Neocyema erythrosoma is a species of pelagic fish, a deep-water bobtail snipe eel in the family Cyematidae. It is the only member of its genus, Neocyema. It was first described by Peter Castle in 1978 after two specimens were caught at great depths in the south Atlantic Ocean in 1971. Further specimens have since been caught in the North Atlantic.[2]
Description
[edit]Neocyema erythrosoma has an elongated arrow-shaped body and grows to a maximum length of 16 centimetres (6.3 in). It is laterally compressed and has a long narrow snout with delicate, fine-boned jaws and small teeth. The eyes are also small and the whole fish is a bright orange-red colour. Muscle bands known as myomeres can be seen through the transparent skin. The skeleton lacks a number of bones that are found in other ray-finned fish; there is no opercular bones or pectoral girdle and only a single branchial arch.[2][3]
Distribution
[edit]At first Neocyema erythrosoma was only known from the southeast Atlantic Ocean near South Africa where, in 1971, the first two specimens were caught at depths of between 2,000 and 2,200 metres (6,600 and 7,200 ft). In 2006, during a deep water NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service biodiversity survey, a research vessel collected a further specimen near the Bear Seamount off the coast of New England at a depth of about 2,284 metres (7,493 ft). Two years later a Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans research vessel caught another specimen in the Gully Marine Protected Area east of Nova Scotia, at a depth of about 1,620 metres (5,310 ft).[2] The locations of these two further finds were the first for the species in the North Atlantic and were both areas in which hundreds of research trawls had been made previously. The fact that the species had not been caught at an earlier date demonstrates its great rarity.[2]
Larval form
[edit]In 1909, Schmidt described a larval form of an eel that had been found in the northeast Atlantic and named it Leptocephalus holti. In 1974, Raju described a similar larval eel from the Pacific Ocean. Both resembled the larva of the bobtail snipe eel Cyema atrum but were morphologically distinct from it. The larvae were transparent and laterally compressed with very long snouts, large eyes, fewer than five intestinal loops and a pattern of lateral pigmentation. The identity of the adult form of these larvae was unknown at the time. After the description of Neocyema erythrosoma in 1978, it was hypothesized that Leptocephalus holti might be its larval form. However, the larvae had lateral pigmentation not found in the adult Neocyema erythrosoma and had been found over 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi) away from its only known location in the South Atlantic.[2]
In 1996, Smith and Miller reconsidered this matter in the light of 47 other specimens of Leptocephalus holti available to them, mostly from the North Atlantic. They determined that there were three species groups among the larvae and that many of the specimens lacked pigmentation. With the discovery of Neocyema erythrosoma in the Northern Atlantic the distance barrier was also overcome and they considered that there was little doubt that Leptocephalus holti was indeed the larval form of Neocyema erythrosoma.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Bailly, Nicolas (2012). Bailly N (ed.). "Neocyema erythrosoma Castle, 1978". FishBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2012-04-29.
- ^ a b c d e f Shannon C. DeVaney; Karsten E. Hartel & Daphne E. Themelis (2009). "The first records of Neocyema (Teleostei: Saccopharyngiformes) in the western North Atlantic with comments on its relationship to Leptocephalus holti Schmidt 1909". Northeastern Naturalist. 16 (3): 409–414. doi:10.1656/045.016.n308.
- ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.). "Neocyema erythrosoma". FishBase. June 2011 version.