Abstract

This paper continues descriptions of new deep-water Antarctic barbeled plunderfishes of the poorly known and the most speciose notothenioid genus Pogonophryne. It is based on a comprehensive collection obtained by the authors in 2009–2010 during an Antarctic toothfish (Dissostichus mawsoni) fishing trip. A new species, the hopbeard plunderfish Pogonophryne neyelovi, the twenty-second species of the genus, is described. The new species belongs to dorsally-spotted short-barbeled species forming the “Pogonophryne mentella” group. Pogonophryne neyelovi sp. n. is characterized by the following combination of characters: a very short and small mental barbel with an ovaloid and short terminal expansion covered by flattened scale-like processes that are mostly bluntly palmate; a moderately protruding lower jaw; a high second dorsal fin almost uniformly black and lacking a sharply elevated anterior lobe; pectoral fins striped anteriorly and uniformly light posteriorly; the anal and pelvic fins light; the dorsal surface of the head and the area anterior to the first dorsal fin covered with large, irregular dark brown blotches and spots; the ventral surface of the head, breast and belly without sharp dark markings. The new species is compared to the closest species Pogonophryne brevibarbata, Pogonophryne tronio, and Pogonophryne ventrimaculata. English vernacular names are proposed for all species of the genus.

Highlights

  • Antarctic barbeled plunderfishes of the genus Pogonophryne (Perciformes: Notothenioidei: Artedidraconidae), the most speciose among notothenioid fish with a circum-Antarctic distribution, inhabit inshore and bathyal bottom zones of the Southern Ocean

  • Additional morphological data obtained by the authors from direct field observations and laboratory examination of specimens of most of the other species of the genus Pogonophryne were used for the comparison, except for two species: finespotted plunderfish P. permitini Andriashev, 1967 and longbeard plunderfish P. mentella Andriashev, 1967, that were compared based on the original descriptions by Andriashev (1967)

  • Damage made by releasing the hook: symphysis of lower jaw disjointed and skin removed from stem of mental barbel though preserved in good condition

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Summary

Introduction

Antarctic barbeled plunderfishes of the genus Pogonophryne (Perciformes: Notothenioidei: Artedidraconidae), the most speciose among notothenioid fish with a circum-Antarctic distribution, inhabit inshore and bathyal bottom zones of the Southern Ocean. Second dorsal fin high in male (its height about 25% SL), lacking any prominent anterior elevated lobe, with longest rays (1st to 7th) very soft, sinuous distally and branched from about mid-length; fin almost entirely black in coloration with bluish insertions in anterior one third and dark basally with light upper margin posteriorly.

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