Abstract

The taxonomic status of three small [probably less than ca. 600 mm in the largest total length (TL)] and poorly known species, Trichiurus brevis Wang and You, 1992 and T. minor Li, 1992, both from South China Sea, and T. russelli Dutt and Thankam, 1966, from Bengal Bay, was reexamined. Trichiurus brevis and T. russelli, being valid species, are redescribed and a neotype is designated for the latter. Trichiurus brevis is considered to be a senior synonym of T. minor, there being no significant differences in their type specimens. Both valid species, i.e., T. brevis and T. russelli, are similar to T. lepturus Linnaeus, 1758 (larger than ca. 1000 mm TL) in general appearance, but clearly differ from the latter in having the top of the supraoccipital crest situated directly above the posterior margin of eye (vs. well behind posterior margin), lower number of total vertebrae (147–155 and 149–153, respectively, in the former two species vs. 168–173 in T. lepturus), longer dorsal fin base (mean 87% and mean 84% vs. mean 76% of TL), and shorter caudal peduncle length (6% and 8% vs. 13% of TL). Furthermore, the former two species are characterized by having the anal fin origin situated below about the 32nd–35th dorsal fin ray base, whereas in T. lepturus it is situated below the 37th–41st dorsal fin ray base. We recognize that T. brevis and T. russelli together comprise a species group, defined as the “T. russelli complex,” in the genus Trichiurus, the two species differing in snout shape (strongly pointed in T. brevis vs. moderately pointed in T. russelli), snout length [mean 35% vs. mean 30% of head length (HL)], preopercle length (22% vs. 19% HL), predorsal length (70% vs. 63% HL), and dermal eye opening (16% vs. 18% HL).

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