Abstract

The scale morphology of nine Mullidae taxa consisting of three genera and nine species from the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman was described and compared using light and scanning electron microscopy from four different body regions. The general scale type in the studied mullid species was ctenoid except in the head region of Mulloidichthys vanicolensis and Parupeneus margaritatus, which had cycloid scales. The scales demonstrated a large focus with the central or centro-posterior position. The large variations of scale morphology were observed for the scales from different body regions of a single species. The shape of focus was in five types with the round type being the most common. In the scales of most examined species, there were 5-6 radii present in the anterior field. No radii exist in the lateral and posterior fields, and the radii orientation was parallel in all the studied species. The rostral margin of scales represented five types among the studied species; waved (M. vanicolensis), smooth in (P. rubescens), dentate (Upeneus doriae), scalloped (U. vittatus), and fluted (U. tragula). The lepidont shape varied among the species from blunt to flat, pointed, tiny, sharp, pointed, triangle, short, and long. The results also showed that the relative scale size has a desirable contribution to separate the examined genera. The scale morphological-based tree was largely consistent with the known systematics of the studied fishes. It was concluded that variation of scale characters has probably taxonomic and even phylogenetic information in both species and genus levels in the studied mullid fishes. However, variation of scale morphology between body regions, as shown in this study, suggests that scale characters should be used cautiously for taxonomic studies of these fishes.

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