Abstract

For the goatfish genus Upeneus Cuvier 1829 (Mullidae), a new taxonomic species group called the "margarethae group" is established which can be distinguished from the six species of the most similar "tragula group" by a combination of the following characteristics: absence of dark pigmentation in the area of the first dorsal-fin tip, 21-25 total gill rakers and 28-30 lateral-line scales. Initially, three recently-described species have been included in the margarethae group: Upeneus margarethae Uiblein Heemstra, 2010, known from the Indian Ocean including the Red Sea and from the Arafura Sea (W Pacific), U. mouthami Randall Kulbicki, 2006, from New Caledonia and Vanuatu (W Pacific), and U. randalli Uiblein Heemstra, 2011, from the Arabian/Persian Gulf and the inner Gulf of Oman (NW Indian Ocean). The present taxonomic review of the margarethae group analyses a large data set of 41 morphometric, 10 meristic and many colour characters obtained from 279 preserved goatfish specimens and 166 fresh-colour photos (plus a fresh-colour drawing). For the nominal species of the group, U. margarethae, a redescription of the colour patterns is provided and new records for Myanmar, Andaman Sea (NE Indian Ocean) and the Gulf of Carpentaria, N Australia (W Pacific), are reported. Three new species are described: U. caudofasciatus n. sp. from the area of the Great Barrier Reef to Torres Strait off NE Australia (Coral Sea, W Pacific), U. gubal n. sp. from the S Gulf of Suez (Northern Red Sea), and U. heterospinus n. sp. from S Indonesia to Singapore, the Gulf of Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, China, Taiwan and Japan (W Pacific). A comprehensive alpha-taxonomic approach is adopted, considering population differences as well as intraspecific size-related variation in morphology and colour patterns by splitting the data set into two size classes, adults (≥ 65 mm SL) and smaller subadults. Inter- and intraspecific comparisons include statistical analyses for species and population with sufficiently large samples sizes (n ≥ 20). Colour-pattern characterization and analysis are based on photos of recently collected and deceased fish (partly associated with voucher specimens), photos obtained from active or resting fishes in situ or in a tank, and inspection of pigmentation patterns retained in preserved specimens. Species differences are elaborated under consideration of distribution patterns and the characteristics found in the closest-most population of widely distributed species such as U. margarethae, resulting in clear and consistent distinction among the six species in single or in a combination of several characteristics. Comparisons among size classes revealed species-specific patterns in morphometric, meristic and colour changes with increasing size. One species, U. heterospinus n. sp., has seven or eight spines in the dorsal fin which occur in balanced ratio across populations. This is a unique characteristic for Upeneus species which usually have either seven or eight dorsal-fin spines, respectively. The best distinction of Upeneus heterospinus n. sp. from all other congeners is reached by combined examination of dorsal-fin spines with several other characters such as barbel colour, presence of a mid-lateral body stripe, pigmentation patterns (partly retained also in preserved fish), gill-raker and pectoral-fin ray numbers, and body-shape variables. The high degree of overall morphological differentation among the three most common species U. caudofasciatus n. sp., U. heterospinus n. sp. and U. margarethae, as revealed by the statistical comparisons, strongly contrasts with a still signficant, but much lower degree of differentiation among populations. The diagnostic characteristics of the margarethae group are updated and the importance to use the results of this taxonomic review in ongoing fisheries-related and ecological research is emphasized. Requirements for future taxonomic research featuring the stunning diversity of the goatfish genus Upeneus are also discussed.

Highlights

  • Margaretha’s goatfish, Upeneus margarethae Uiblein & Heemstra, 2010 (Mullidae), is a fairly widespread species that occurs in the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) between Mozambique, the Red Sea, S India and Sri Lanka, the Eastern Indian Ocean (EIO) off W Thailand and NW Australia, as well as in the Arafura Sea off N Australia, SW Pacific

  • Among the 39 valid Upeneus species (Uiblein et al 2017), U. margarethae has been included in the so-called tragula group based on similarities in meristic, morphometric and colour characters (Uiblein et al 2016), along with eight other species: Upeneus heemstra Uiblein & Gouws, 2014, U. luzonius Jordan & Seale, 1907, U. mouthami Randall & Kulbicki, 2006, U. niebuhri Gueze, 1976, U. oligospilus Lachner, 1954, U. randalli Uiblein & Heemstra, 2011, U. sundaicus (Bleeker, 1855) and the nominal species U. tragula Richardson, 1846

  • With the three new species being added, the genus Upeneus consists of 42 valid species, of which 37 species belong to six taxonomic species groups and five species are ungrouped (Table 12)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Margaretha’s goatfish, Upeneus margarethae Uiblein & Heemstra, 2010 (Mullidae), is a fairly widespread species that occurs in the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) between Mozambique, the Red Sea, S India and Sri Lanka, the Eastern Indian Ocean (EIO) off W Thailand and NW Australia, as well as in the Arafura Sea off N Australia, SW Pacific. U. niebuhri, U. oligospilus and U. tragula all have a dark first dorsal-fin tip, and U. luzonius and U. sundaicus have 18–22 gill rakers and 31–34 lateral-line scales (Uiblein et al 2016). In contrast to U. margarethae, U. randalli and U. mouthami are more restricted in their distribution, occurring in the Arabian/Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman (U. randalli), and in New Caledonia and Vanuatu (U. mouthami) (Uiblein et al 2016) These three species are here included in a new taxonomic group, the so-called “margarethae group”. Since the descriptions of U. margarethae and U. randalli, the first author examined a large number of specimens with similar characteristics of the margarethae group during fish collection visits. The results are discussed with respect to the need for a more complete understanding of the diversity of Upeneus goatfishes and to take steps towards studying the ecology and biology of the various species and populations in a comparative context

Material & methods
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call