SMITHIANA Publications in Aquatic Biodiversity Bulletin No. 7, May 2007 SAIAB Published by the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity Margaret Mary Smith (1916-1987), James Leonard Brierley Smith (1897-1968) with their dog Marlin The publication series (Monographs, Bulletins) of SAIAB (formerly the JLB Smith Institute of Ichthyology), in its new format, honours James Leonard Brierley Smith and Margaret Mary Smith with the name Smithiana, in recognition of their many years of devoted service to African aquatic biology. Their life's work, a team effort, established modern ichthyology in southern Africa and laid the groundwork for the expansion of aquatic biology throughout the region. All contents of this publication © 2007, The South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, Grahamstown Front cover photograph: Left pectoral fin of a preserved coelacanth specimen by Wouter Holleman. © SAIAB, 2006 SMITHIANA BULLETIN NO. 7 CONTENTS John E. McCosker. Luthulenchelys heemstraorum, a new genus and species of snake eel (Anguilliformes: Ophichthidae) from KwaZulu-Natal, with comments on Ophichthus rutidoderma (Bleeker, 1853) and its synonyms. .3 John E. Randall. Iniistius grijfithsi, a new razorfish (Perciformes: Labridae) from Mauritius.9 Leonard J. V. Compagno and Phillip C. Heemstra. Electrolux addisoni, a new genus and species of electric ray from the east coast of South Africa (Rajiformes: Torpedinoidei: Narkidae), with a review of torpedinoid taxonomy. .15 Wouter Holleman. Fishes of the Genus Helcogramma (Blennioidei: Tripterygiidae) in the Western Indian Ocean, including Sri Lanka, with descriptions of four new species. .51 Smithiana Bulletins and Monographs are publications of the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, for original scientific articles in the fields of taxonomy, systematics, ethology, ecology, biogeography and conservation of the fishes of Africa and its surrounding waters. Priority will be given to papers by staff and associates of the Institute. Manuscripts from outside the Institute will be considered if they are pertinent to the work of the Institute or use the Institute's collections. For instructions to authors, please see the publications page at http://www.saiab.ru.ac.za Smithiana Bulletin 7: 3-82 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2017 with funding from JRS Biodiversity Foundation https://archive.org/details/smithiana7200sout Luthulenchelys heemstraorum, a new genus and species of snake eel (Anguilliformes: Ophichthidae) from KwaZulu-Natal, with comments on Ophichthus rutidoderma (Bleeker, 1853) and its synonyms John E. McCosker California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California 94118, USA e-mail: [email protected] (Received 17 September 2006; accepted 2 January 2007) Abstract. Luthulenchelys heemstraorum genus and species novum, subfamily Ophichthinae, tribe Ophichthini, is described from a 472 mm eel trawled off Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, in 450-460 m. Luthulenchelys differs from all known ophichthids in having the following suite of characters: an extremely elongate body, long tail, dorsal-fin origin in anterior trunk region, an elongate pectoral fin, posterior eye/jaw location, blunt snout, posterior nostril within upper lip, slender dentition, a single vomerine tooth, uniquely developed lateral-line ossicles, and five gill arches, with a very reduced fifth ceratobranchial. Several changes in taxonomy are proposed: Ophisurus lumbricoides Bleeker 1853, Ophisurus rutidodermatoides Bleeker 1853, and Ophichthus derbyensis Whitley 1941 are junior synonyms of Ophichthus rutidoderma (Bleeker 1853); Sphagebranchus lumbricoides Bleeker 1864 is a species of Yirrkala. Key Words: Ophichthidae, Luthulenchelys heemstraorum gen. & sp. nov., KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, Ophichthus rutidoderma, Ophichthus rutidodermatoides, Ophichthus derbyensis, Yirrkala lumbricoides INTRODUCTION MATERIALS AND METHODS The snake eel fauna of the Western Indian Ocean is The single specimen is deposited at the South African rich, diverse and poorly known. J.L.B. Smith (1962) Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB), included 55 species in his monograph of the Western Grahamstown. Indian Ocean and Red Sea ophicthids. McCosker and Specimen measurements are straight-line, made Castle's (1986) account of the southern African species either with a 300 mm ruler with 0.5 mm gradations (for (from northern Namibia to Mozambique) treated 29 total length, trunk length, and tail length) and species and made several changes in taxonomy. In a recorded to the nearest 0.5 mm, or with dial calipers forthcoming volume on coastal fishes of the Western (all other measurements) and recorded to the nearest Indian Ocean and Red Sea (Phillip Heemstra and Jack 0.1 mm. Body length comprises head and trunk Randall, editors), I will report at least 70 species and 30 lengths. Head length is measured from the snout tip to genera of ophichthids, including numerous changes in the postero-dorsal margin of the gill opening; trunk taxonomic status. In preparation for that work I have length is taken from the gill opening to mid-anus; examined many of the recently collected specimens maximum body depth does not include the median from South Africa and beyond that are deposited in fins. Head-pore terminology follows McCosker et al. the collections of the South African Institute for (1989: 257), in which supraorbital pores include the Aquatic Biology, the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, the ethmoidal pore + pores in supraorbital canal, i.e. 1+3, United States National Museum of Natural History, and the infraorbital pores include pores along the the California Academy of Sciences, the British upper jaw + those in the vertical canal behind the eye Museum of Natural History, and other institutions, ("postorbital pores"), i.e. 4 + 2, as the last pore and have discovered at least six species of ophichthids included along the upper jaw is frequently part of the that appear to be undescribed, as well as a number of postorbital series. Gill arch and lateral-line ossicle eels whose taxonomic history is as twisted as the state examination was accomplished after removal and of their holotypes. Undoubtedly additional ophicthid clearing and counterstaining with alcian blue and species from this area remain to be discovered. The alizarin red dyes (Dingerkus & Uhler 1977). Vertebral majority of the known undescribed species await counts (which include the hypural) were taken from description or explanation in a variety of generic radiographs. Radiographic techniques are described revisions that are underway. One new species, in (Bohlke 1989). The mean vertebral formula (MVF) is however, is so distinct that it deserves a new genus as expressed as the average of predorsal, preanal, and well, and in preparation for the publication of the total vertebrae (Bohlke, 1982). Institutional abbre¬ Western Indian Ocean volume, I herein describe it and viations follow (Leviton et al., 1985). take pleasure in naming it after Phil and Elaine Heemstra in recognition of their prodigious efforts in this and previous regional works. Smithiana Bulletin 7: 3-7 4 John E. McCosker Luthulenchelys een. nov. Figs. 1-4 Type species: Luthulenchelys heemstraorum sp. nov. Diagnosis. An elongate ophichthid, subfamily Ophichthinae, tribe Ophichthini (sensu McCosker 1977), with tail much longer than head and trunk; median fins low; dorsal fin arising well behind pectoral fin; pectoral fin base arising above and occupying more than half of gill opening; gill openings lateral, elongate, nearly vertical and crescentic; eye moderately developed, its centre above posterior quarter of upper jaw, its posterior margin slightly in advance of rictus; jaws moderately developed, but not elongate; snout conical, tapering evenly, its tip rounded; underside of snout with a median sulcus exposing the teeth in advance of anterior nostril bases; anterior nostrils within short tubes; posterior nostrils a hole within upper lip, covered by a flap; teeth conical, erect, numerous and small, uniserial on mandible and biserial on maxillary, a single vomerine tooth; 2 preopercular pores; gill arches similar to those of Ophichthus (cf. Nelson 1966; McCosker 1977), however, fifth ceratobranchial is a thin, nearly ossified rod for anterior 80%, the remainder cartilaginous; upper pharyngeal tooth plates fused. Other characters those of the single species. Etymology. Named Luthulenchelys in honour of Chief Albert John Mvumbi Luthuli of KwaZulu-Natal, Africa's first winner of the Nobel Peace Prize and former President of the African National Congress; and enchelys, an ancient Greek word for eel, feminine. Remarks. In general appearance, the type species of Luthulenchelys appears similar to some of the very elongate species of Ophichthus, such as O. rutidoderma and O. microcephalus. Luthulenchelys heemstraorum differs from them in the condition of its upper lip and associated posterior nostril, its large posterior eye (ending nearly above rictus, rather than in advance of it), its reduced vomerine dentition, its fifth ceratobranchial reduced to a minor cartilaginous rod (rather than an ossified structure), and in the condition of its lateral-line ossicles. Adaptations displayed by the new species such as the nearly uniform dark coloration, small and numerous teeth, fairly large eye, tumid snout (associated with burrowing in soft mud, rather than the sharp-pointed snouts and tails of shallow-water ophichthids that are adaptations for burrowing into sand), moderately developed cephalic pores, and poorly developed median fins are shared by other deep-dwelling ophichthids (cf. McCosker et al. 1989; McCosker 1999). Those similarities and adaptations are so apparent that upon first glance the new species appears very similar to several deep-dwelling Atlantic myrophine ophichthids (McCosker, 1989), such as Asarcenchelys longimanus McCosker 1985, Mixomyrophis pusillipinna McCosker 1985 and Pseudomyrophis nimius Bohlke 1960, whose ancestry is very different to that of Fig. 1. Holotype of Luthulenchelys heemstraorum sp. nov., the new species. SAIAB 75732, 472 mm TL. Smithiana Bulletin 7: 3-7 New snake eel from South Africa 5 Luthulenchelys heemstraorum sp. nov. pores 1+4, infraorbital pores 4 + 2, lower jaw pores 5, preopercular pores 2, supratemporal pores 3. Lateral¬ Holotype: SAIAB 75732, 472 mm TL, sex undetermined line pores apparent only in anterior trunk region; 9 (gonads not apparent), from KwaZulu-Natal, South before gill opening in a high-arching sequence, the Africa, off Durban (29°57'14"S, 31°16'23"E), 450-460 remainder difficult to discern due to condition of m, collected by Grant van der Westhuizen aboard specimen. Lateral-line canal unique in appearance F/V Ocean Spray using an otter trawl, field no. ORI (Fig. 3) among the Ophichthini, exhibiting horizontal 180-3/5, on 16 November 2004. tubes indented at each end; pores in tail region appear as prominent sharp spikes as seen from above (these Diagnosis. An elongate species of ophichthine with: are lateral processes of the vertebrae as evidenced by tail 62%, head 7.2%, and body depth at gill opening radiography, perhaps exaggerated by the desiccated 1.3% of total length; dorsal-fin origin nearly 2 head condition of the specimen), reaching nearly to tail tip. lengths behind pectoral-fin tips; pectoral fin elongate; posterior nostril a hole within upper lip, covered by a flap that extends below edge of lip; no barbels on upper lip and a no slit at posterior nostril; pores small but conspicuous, SO 1 + 4, IO 4 + 2, POM 5 + 2; teeth small and conical, biserial on upper jaw, uniserial on Fig. 2. Head of holotype of Luthulenchelys heemstraorum lower jaw, a single vomerine tooth; coloration uniform sp. nov., SAIAB 75732, 472 mm TL. grey-black; vertebral formula 20/61/165. Counts and measurements of the holotype (in mm). Total length 472; head 34.0; trunk 144; tail 294; predorsal . A/ distance 64; pectoral-fin length 8.25; pectoral base 2.4; body depth ~6 at gill openings; body width ~6 at gill openings; body depth ~5 at anus; body width -5 at Fig. 3. Left lateral-line pores 21-23 of holotype of anus; snout 7.5; tip of snout to rictus 11.2; snout Luthulenchelys heemstraorum sp. nov., Scale indicates overhang 3.5; eye diameter 3.0; interorbital width 3.5; 1 mm. gill opening height 3.1; isthmus width 2.6. Teeth (Fig. 4) small, conical, slightly recurved; Description. Body very elongate, trunk subcircular, biserial in upper jaw and uniserial on mandible. An tail laterally compressed; body depth at gill openings intermaxillary rosette of 4, followed by a gap, then a 79 in TL. Branchial basket moderately expanded; 17 diamond of 4, followed by a single vomerine teeth. pairs of overlapping branchiostegal rays visible by Maxillary tooth rows linear, separated by a narrow radiograph. Head 4.2 in trunk. Head and trunk 2.7 and gap; inner row of -16-17 larger teeth, flanked medially head 14 in TL. Snout rounded, moderately acute when by -22-24 smaller teeth in outer row. Lower-jaw teeth viewed from above; a short groove bisecting underside uniserial, -28-30 descending in size to become very of snout nearly to tip of upper jaw. A pair of small small posteriorly. bumps on snout flanking dorsal midline in advance of anterior nostril base (their appearance possibly exaggerated by condition of specimen). Lower jaw included, its tip reaching well beyond base of anterior- nostril tubes. Upper jaw not elongated, rictus immediately behind a vertical line at posterior margin of eye. Eye fairly large, 3.7 in upper jaw and 11.3 in head. Anterior nostrils tubular, extending ventro- laterally from snout at -45° from horizontal, reaching below upper lip and beyond tip of chin. Posterior Fig. 4. Dentition of holotype of Luthulenchelys nostrils an elongate opening within upper lip, not heemstraorum sp. nov., SAIAB 75732, 472 mm TL. visible externally, covered by a flap (expanded edge of lip) that extends below edge of mouth and lacks a Gill arches removed, cleared and counterstained. vertical slit. No barbels along upper lip. Dorsal-fin Gill arches developed, similar to those of Ophichthus origin well behind pectoral fin about a head length into (cf. McCosker 1977: 32) except for fifth ceratobranchial trunk length. Median fins low but obvious, ending a condition; first basibranchial ossified, all others little more than eye diameter before bluntly pointed cartilaginous; hypobranchials 1-2 ossified, 3-4 and laterally compressed tail tip. Pectoral fins cartilaginous; epibranchials 1-4 ossified; infra- elongate. pharyngobranchials 2-3 ossified; fifth ceratobranchial Head pores small but apparent (Fig. 2). Single very reduced, a thin nearly ossified rod for anterior median interorbital and temporal pores. Supraorbital 80%, the remainder cartilaginous; upper pharyngeal Smithiana Bulletin 7: 3-7 6 John E. McCosker tooth plates fused, containing 2-4 rows of conical dentition, but the snout is shorter and sharper, its eye recurved teeth; lower pharyngeal tooth plates contain is smaller and located more anteriorly than that of 2-3 rows of 6-14 conical recurved teeth. L. heemstraorum, its lateral-line ossicles are more Colour in ethanol: uniform grey-black; throat, snout typical of the Ophichthus condition (McCosker 1977), and chin slightly darker; median and pectoral fins and it has more total vertebrae (195-199 vs. 165). pale; anterior nostrils, inside of mouth, anal region and While examining the type (BMNH 1867.11.28:226, peritoneum pale. A photograph of the dead specimen 94.5 cm TL) of Ophisurus rutidoderma Bleeker (1853: 30) taken soon after its capture indicates that in life it was at the British Museum, I attempted to decipher its uniform dark brown. identity and that of related Bleeker types. I ultimately concluded that Ophisurus rutidodermatoides Bleeker Etymology. Named in honour of Phil and Elaine (1853: 31) [treated by Kaup 1856: 18, as Pisoodonophis Heemstra in recognition of their efforts to understand, rutidermatoides (sic.), later emended to Ophichthys illustrate, and explain the fishes of the Indian Ocean to rhytidodermatoides by Gunther 1870: 62] and Ophisurus scientists and the general public. lumbricoides Bleeker (1853: 32) are junior synonyms of O. rutidoderma. The types of O. rutidodermatoides Distribution. Known only from the type specimen, (BMNH 1867.11.28:292, 61 cm TL) and O. lumbricoides collected off Durban in 450-460 m depth. (BMNH 1867.11.28:300, 41.5 cm TL) are in poor condition, however, that of O. rutidoderma is in fair Remarks and Comparisons. The characteristics of the condition. Eschmeyer (1998: 1491) cited O. rutidoderma new species are those of the monotypic genus. The and O. rutidodermatoides as valid species whose unique new species is easily separable from any known holotypes were "whereabouts unknown." My ophichthid on the basis of its eye size and location, its examination of those Bleeker specimens in the British extremely reduced vomerine dentition, its body Museum demonstrated that the length and locality elongation, and other characters unique to the genus. data were appropriate, and I therefore identify those Comparisons with species of Ophichthus that are specimens, with confidence, as the holotypes. similar in appearance are described in the following Eschmeyer (1998: 951) listed O. lumbricoides as a valid section. species of Yirrkala, and also suggested that the whereabouts of the unique holotype was unknown. It COMMENTS ON OPHICHTHUS RUTIDODERMA is in fact the British Museum specimen, as evidenced by the length of the specimen and additional records During my initial attempts to identify the specimen in the collection; Eschmeyer's assumption of its herein described as Luthulenchelys heemstraorum, I validity was based upon McCosker and Castle's (1986: examined the extremely elongate species of 185) mistaken referral of Ophisurus lumbricoides Bleeker Ophichthus, O. microcephalus and O. rutidoderma. 1853, rather than Sphagebranchus lumbricoides Bleeker Ophichthys microcephalus Day 1878 was described from 1864, to Yirrkala in their treatment. I have also Malabar, India, and is currently known only from examined the holotype (AM.1.840, 258 mm TL) of Day's description and an extant 625 mm TL syntype in Ophichthus derbyensis Whitley 1941 described from a the Australian Museum (B.7843). (Ophichthus specimen from Derby, Western Australia, and found it microcephalus may ultimately deserve relocation to to be a synonym of Ophichthus rutidoderma. It has the another genus, however, the extant syntype is same proportions, meristics, and dental condition as somewhat desiccated and its head is damaged, which that of Bleeker's type specimens. The vertebral would disallow an adequate generic decision.) I formulae of the four holotypes are as follows: compared that syntype to the holotype of O. derbyensis 14/61/195; O. lumbricoides 16/64/199; Luthulenchelys heemstraorum and found them to differ O. rutidoderma 16/61/197; and O. rutidodermatoides in numerous characters: the teeth of O. microcephalus 7/63/197. are more numerous, more closely-set, and stouter than In summary, the twisted tale of these elongate those of L. heemstraorum-, the snout is shorter and ophichthids is as follows: Ophisurus lumbricoides sharper, the body less elongate, the eye is Bleeker 1853, Ophisurus rutidodermatoides Bleeker 1853, comparatively smaller and located more anteriorly, and Ophichthus derbyensis Whitley 1941 are herein and O. microcephalus has more vertebrae than L. considered to be junior synonyms of Ophichthus heemstraorum 12/69/209 vs. 20/61/165); and its rutidoderma (Bleeker 1853), and Sphagebranchus lateral-line ossicles are more typical of the Ophichthus lumbricoides Bleeker 1864 is a valid species of Yirrkala. condition (McCosker 1977) than are those of L. heemstraorum. I also compared the shallow-water Indonesian ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS species Ophichthus rutidoderma (Bleeker 1853) (treated by Kaup 1856: 18, as Pisoodonophis rutidoderma, later My list of acknowledgments could easily exceed the emended to Ophichthys rhytidoderma by Gunther 1870: length of the elongate holotype of the new species. I 63) to Luthulenchelys heemstraorum. It has a similar sincerely thank the following for their assistance: Grant van der Westhuizen and Sean Fennessy of the dorsal-fin origin (above the 16th vertebra) and biserial Smithiana Bulletin 7: 3-7 New snake eel from South Africa 7 South African Oceanographic Research Institute (ORI) Dingerkus, G. & L.D. Uhler. 1977. Enzyme clearing of alcian for collecting and photographing the type specimen; blue stained whole small vertebrates for demonstration Beth Herd Guy for preparing the illustrations; Mysi of cartilage. Stain Technology 52: 229-232. Hoang (CAS) for clearing and staining the gill arches Eschmeyer, W. N., ed. 1998. Catalog of Fishes. California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco. 3 vols., 2905 pp. and skin segment; William N. Eschmeyer (CAS) for Gunther, A. 1870. Catalogue of the Physostomi, containing advice concerning nomenclature; the research and the families Gymnotidae ... Leptocardii, in the British curatorial staff members of the Australian Museum Museum. Catalogue of the fishes in the British Museum. Vol. (AMS), the British Museum of Natural History 8. British Museum, London. 549 pp. (BMNH), the Bernice P. Bishop Museum (BPBM), the Kaup, J. 1856. Catalogue of apodal fish in the collection of the California Academy of Sciences (CAS), the South British Museum. London. 160 pp. African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB), the Leviton, A.E., R.H. Gibbs, JR., E. Heal & C.E. Dawson. 1985. United States National Museum of Natural History Standards in herpetology and ichthyology: part I. (USNM), and the Universiteit van Amsterdam Standard symbolic codes for institutional resources Zoologisch Museum (ZMA) for their assistance with collections in herpetology and ichthyology. Copeia 1985: specimens; Phil Heemstra and the late Margaret Mary 802-832. McCosker, J.E. 1977. The osteology, classification, and Smith for their advice and assistance during my visits relationships of the eel family Ophichthidae. Proceedings to SAIAB; Tomio Iwamoto (CAS) for reading a draft of of the California Academy of Sciences ser. 4, 41(1): 1-123. this manuscript; and Don Linker and the Jewish — 1985. Two new genera and two new species of deepwater Community Endowment Fund for their financial western Atlantic worm eels (Pisces: Ophichthidae). support of the artist. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 44(2): 9-15. — 1999. Pisces Anguilliformes: Deepwater snake eels LITERATURE CITED (Ophichthidae) from the New Caledonia region. Southwest Pacific Ocean. In: A. Crosnier (ed.), Resultats Bleeker, P. 1853. Bijdrage tot de kennis der Muraenoi'den en des Campagnes MUSORSTOM Vol. 20, ed. A. Crosnier. Symbranchoiden van den Indischen Archipel. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle 180: Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap van 571-588. Kunsten en Wetenschappen 25: 1-76. McCosker, J.E., E.B. Bohlke & J.E. Bohlke. 1989. Family — 1864. Atlas ichthyologicjue des Indes Orientales Neerlandaises, Ophichthidae. In: Fishes of the Western North Atlantic, publie sous les auspices du gouvernement colonial. Tome 4, Part 9, Volume 1, ed. E.B. Bohlke, pp. 254-412. Memoirs of Murenes, Synbranches, Leptocephales. Leiden. 132 pp, the Sears Foundation for Marine Research, New Haven. plates 145-193. McCosker R, J.E. & P.H.J. Castle. 1986. Family Bohlke, E. B. 1982. Vertebral formulae of type specimens of Ophichthidae. In: Smith, M.M. and P.C. Heemstra (eds.), eels (Pisces: Anguilliformes). Proceedings of the Academy Tlie Sea Fishes of Southern Africa, pp. 176-186. Macmillan of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 134: 31-49. South Africa, Johannesburg. — 1989. Methods and Terminology. In: Fishes of the Nelson, G.J. 1966. Gill arches of teleostean fishes of the order Western North Atlantic, Part 9, Volume 1, ed. E.B. Anguilliformes. Pacific Science 20(4): 391-408. Bohlke, pp. 1-7. Memoirs of the Sears Foundation for Marine Smith, J.L.B. 1962. Sand-dwelling eels of the western Indian Research, New Haven. Ocean and the Red Sea. Rhodes University Ichthyological Bohlke, J.E. 1960. A new ophichthid eel of the genus Bulletin 24: 447-466. Pseudomyrophis from the Gulf of Mexico. Notulae Whitley, G.P. 1941. Ichthyological notes and illustrations. Naturae No. 329:1-8. Australian Zoologist 10: 1-50. Day, F. 1878. The fishes of India; being a natural history of the fishes known to inhabit the seas and fresh waters of India, Burma, and Ceylon. Part 4: 553-779. Smithiana Bulletin 7: 3-7 .