Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Articles
Published: 2010-05-17
Page range: 64–68
Abstract views: 33
PDF downloaded: 17

Entomacrodus solus, a new species of blenny (Perciformes, Blenniidae) from the Red Sea

Division of Fishes, Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Museum Support Center, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Suitland, MD, USA
Station of Naturalists, Omsk, RUSSIA
Fish Lonely blenny fish Ras Mohammed Egypt

Abstract

Entomacrodus solus, new species, is described on the basis of 35 specimens collected by J.E. Randall on a shallow rocky shore at the end of a mangrove channel at Ras Mohammed, Red Sea. The new species belongs to the Nigricans Species Group, which is distinguished from all other blennies in having about the medial third of the ventral margin of the upper lip entire and the lateral thirds crenulate. Within the group, now consisting of 11 species, the new species is distinguished by having only single pores at each preopercular pore position, typically three predorsal commissural pores, and small white spots on lips, head and body. Entomacrodus solus is the only species of the circumtropical genus Entomacrodus known from the Red Sea.

References

  1. Allen, G.R., Steene, R.C. & Orchard, M. (2007) Fishes of Christmas Island (Second Edition). Christmas Island Natural History Association. 284 pp.

    Bleeker, P. (1859) Over eenige vischsoorten van de Zuidkust-wateren van Java. Natuurkundig Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch Indië, 19, 329-352.

    Bryan, W.A. & Herre, A.W.C.T. (1903) Annotated list of Marcus Island fishes. In: A monograph of Marcus Island. Occasional Papers of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnology and Natural History, 2 (no. 1), 126-139.

    Cuvier, G. & Valenciennes, A. (1836) Histoire naturelle des poissons. Paris, Strasbourg Edition 11, i-xx + 1-506 + 2 pp., Pls. 307-343.

    Fowler, H.W. (1932a) The fishes obtained by Lieut. H. C. Kellers of the United States Naval Eclipse Expedition of 1930, at Niuafoou Island, Tonga Group, in Oceania. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 81 (2931), 1-9.

    Fowler, H.W. (1932b) The fishes obtained by the Pinchot South Seas Expedition of 1929, with description of one new genus and three new species. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 80 (no. 2906), 1-16.

    Gill, T.N. (1859) Description of a new genus of Salarianae, from the West Indies. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 11, 168-169.

    Golani, D. & Bogorodsky, S.V. In press. The Fishes of the Red Sea –Reappraisal and Updated Checklist. Zootaxa.

    Goren, M. & Dor, M. (1994) An updated checklist of the fishes of the Red Sea. CLOFRES II. Jerusalem: The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, xii + 120 pp.

    Hastings, P.A. & Springer, V.G. (2009) Recognizing diversity in blennioid fish nomenclature (Teleostei: Blennioidei). Zootaxa, 2120, 3-14.

    Herre, A.W.C.T. (1938) A new Chinese blenny. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 51, 65-66.

    Jordan, D.S. & Gilbert, C.H. (1882) Descriptions of thirty-three new species of fishes from Mazatlan, Mexico. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 4 (237), 338-365.

    Randall, J.E. (2005) Reef and shore fishes of the South Pacific, New Caledonia to Tahiti and the Pitcairn Islands. University of Hawai’i Press, Honolulu, xii + 707 pp.

    Regan, C.T. (1909) A collection of fishes made by Dr. C. W. Andrews, F.R.S., at Christmas Island. Proceedings of the General Meetings for Scientific Business of the Zoological Society of London, 1909 (pt 2), 403-406, Pls. 65-66.

    Springer, V.G. (1967) A new species of the blenniid fish genus Entomacrodus from the eastern Atlantic Ocean. Atlantide Report, No. 9, 59-91, Pl. 4.

    Springer, V.G. (1967) Revision of the circumtropical shorefish genus Entomacrodus (Blenniidae: Salariinae). Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 122 (3582), 1-150, Pls. 1–30.

    Springer, V.G. (1972) Additions to revisions of the blenniid fish genera Ecsenius and Entomacrodus, with descriptions of three new species of Ecsenius. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 134, 1-13.

    Springer, V.G. & Fricke, R.A. (2000) Description of two new blenniid fish species: Entomacrodus lemuria from the western Indian Ocean and E. williamsi from the western Pacific Ocean. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 113 (2), 386-396.