Fishes: A Guide to Their Diversity. Philip A. Hastings

Fishes: A Guide to Their Diversity - Philip A. Hastings


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      DIVERSITY: 1 family, 2 genera, 7 species

      REPRESENTATIVE GENERA: Pliotrema, Pristiophorus

      DISTRIBUTION: Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans (excluding eastern Pacific)

      HABITAT: Marine; tropical to temperate; continental shelf to slope, benthic on soft substrates

      REMARKS: Saw sharks, so named because of their saw-like snouts, are superficially similar to the sawfishes (Pristiformes), but differ in having the pectoral fins separate from the head, lateral gill slits, and long barbels on the ventral side of the rostrum. These sharks are yolk-sac viviparous (Musick, 2011; Musick and Ellis, 2005) and have litters of 7–17 pups. The large rostral teeth lie flat until after birth. The one species of Pliotrema, P. warreni, is unusual in having six gill slits. These sharks feed on small fishes, crustaceans, and squids, and occasionally are utilized as food fishes.

      REFERENCES: Compagno, 1984a; Compagno, in Carpenter and Niem, 1998; Compagno, in Carpenter, 2003; Compagno, 2005; Compagno et al., 2005; Musick, 2011; Musick and Ellis, 2005.

      PRISTIOPHORIFORM CHARACTERISTICS:

      1) snout extremely long, depressed, with rows of lateral and ventral teeth

      2) barbels long, ventral and anterior to nostrils

      3) all five (or six) gill slits lateral and usually anterior to pectoral fin

      4) spiracles large

      5) lateral ridge on caudal peduncle

      6) anal fin absent

      7) head depressed, body cylindrical

      ILLUSTRATED SPECIMEN:

      Pristiophorus japonicus, SIO 92–164, 1,128 mm TL (dorsal view)

      BATOIDEA—Skates and Rays

      The Batoidea includes over 650 species of skates and rays that are classified in four orders, 17 families, and over 70 genera. They are characterized by a variety of features including a dorso-ventrally flattened head and body, enlarged pectoral fins contiguous with the head, mouth and gill slits opening on the ventral side of the head, and eyes and spiracles placed on the dorsal side of the head. The monophyly of this group is well established (Aschliman et al., 2012; McEachran and Aschliman, 2004; McEachran et al., 1998; Naylor et al., 2005) and the group has long been recognized under a variety of names including the Hypotremata, Batidoidimorpha, and Rajiformes sensu lato (Nelson, 2006).

      Hypothesized phylogenetic relationships of the Batoidea (rays) after (left) McEachran and Aschliman (2004) and (right) Aschliman et al. (2012).

      TORPEDINIFORMES—Electric Rays

      There are four families, 11 genera, and 67 species of electric rays, characterized by a nearly circular disc, electric organs located on the pectoral fins, and a completely naked body (without denticles or spines). The Narcinidae is described in more detail below.

      REFERENCES: McEachran and Aschliman, 2004

      TORPEDINIFORMES : NARCINIDAE—Numbfishes

      DIVERSITY: 4 genera, 31 species

      REPRESENTATIVE GENERA: Benthobatis, Diplobatis, Discopyge, Narcine

      DISTRIBUTION: Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans

      HABITAT: Marine; tropical to warm temperate; continental shelf to continental slope, benthic on soft substrates

      REMARKS: Numbfishes use their electric organs for both defense and feeding. They can be distinguished from the similar torpedo electric rays (Torpedinidae) by their similarsized dorsal fins (first fin larger in torpedo rays), relatively smaller caudal fin, and thin (rather than thick) outer margin of the pectoral-fin disc. Numbfishes prey on benthic invertebrates and small fishes, using their protrusible mouths to provide suction for removing organisms from soft sediments. Numbfishes are yolk-sac viviparous (Musick, 2011; Musick and Ellis, 2005).

      REFERENCES: Compagno, 2005; de Carvalho et al., in Carpenter and Niem, 1999; McEachran, in Fischer et al., 1995; McEachran and de Carvalho, in Carpenter, 2003; Musick, 2011; Musick and Ellis, 2005.

      NARCINID CHARACTERISTICS:

      1) two dorsal fins of equal size, positioned posteriorly

      2) mouth slot-shaped, jaws protrusible

      3) pectoral fins thin around outer edges

      4) caudal fin and dorsal fins similar in size

      5) lobes of caudal fin continuous

      ILLUSTRATED SPECIMEN:

      Narcine brasiliensis, SIO 67–89, 300 mm TL

      PRISTIFORMES : PRISTIDAE—Sawfishes

      DIVERSITY: 1 family, 2 genera, 7 species

      REPRESENTATIVE GENERA: Anoxypristis, Pristis

      DISTRIBUTION: Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans

      HABITAT: Marine and occasionally in freshwater; tropical; continental shelf and coastal, demersal and benthic on soft substrates

      REMARKS: The remarkably large rostral blade with teeth on either side distinguishes sawfishes from all other fishes except sawsharks, from which they can be differentiated by their absence of barbels and by their pectoral fins being connected to the head. These impressive predators use their “saw” for disabling swimming prey or digging for buried prey in soft sediments. Sawfishes are known to enter freshwater, with some individuals captured more than 1,000 km upriver, and are known to reproduce in at least one freshwater lake (Thorson, 1976). Sawfishes are yolk-sac viviparous (Musick, 2011; Musick and Ellis, 2005). All seven species are listed as critically endangered by the IUCN (2013) as a result of overfishing (sawfishes are especially susceptible to gill-nets) and habitat degradation.

      REFERENCES: de Carvalho, 2003; Compagno, 2005; Compagno and Last, in Carpenter and Niem, 1999; McEachran and de Carvalho, in Carpenter, 2003; Musick, 2011; Musick and Ellis, 2005; Thorson, 1976.

      PRISTIFORM CHARACTERISTICS:

      1) snout elongate, blade-like, with single row of large teeth on each side

      2) body large and shark-like, with anterior margin of pectoral fins attached to head

      3) nostrils well anterior and not connected to mouth

      4) spiracles large

      5) two large dorsal fins of equal size, widely separated

      6) barbels absent

      ILLUSTRATED SPECIMEN:

      A) Pristis pectinata, UAZ uncatalogued, 940 mm to end of broken snout (dorsal view)

      B) head of Pristis pectinata, UAZ uncatalogued (ventral view)

      RAJIFORMES—Skates

      The skates are the most diverse order of chondrichthyan fishes, with 361 species and over 30 genera in four families. Their disc is diamond- or heart-shaped, and the dorsal surface of the tail has one or more longitudinal rows of thorns but no stinging spine. Skates have large, well-developed spiracles that usually contain visible pseudobranchs.

      REFERENCES: Aschliman et al., 2012; McEachran and Aschliman, 2004.

      RAJIFORMES : RHINOBATIDAE—Guitarfishes

      DIVERSITY:


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