Bovichtus
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| Bovichtus | |
|---|---|
| illustration of Callionymus diacanthus | |
| Bovichtus angustifrons | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Actinopterygii |
| Order: | Perciformes |
| Family: | Bovichtidae |
| Genus: | Bovichtus Valenciennes, 1832 |
| Type species | |
| Callionymus diacanthus Carmichael, 1819[1] | |
| Synonyms[1] | |
| |
Bovichtus is a genus of fish in the family Bovichtidae found in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Ocean.
Species
Bovichtus was formally described as a genus in 1832 by the French zoologist Achille Valenciennes with Callionymus diacanthus, which had been described by the Scottish botanist and officer in the British Army Dugald Carmichael in 1819 with the type locality given as Tristan da Cunha in the South Atlantic,[2] as the type species.[1] The name of the genus, Bovichtus, is derived from bovus meaning "bull" and ichthys which means fish, based on the local name for Bovichtus species in Valparaiso, Chile, torito, meaning "little bull".[3]
There are currently 8 recognized species in this genus:[4]
- Bovichtus angustifrons Regan, 1913
- Bovichtus argentinus MacDonagh, 1931
- Bovichtus chilensis Regan, 1913
- Bovichtus diacanthus (Carmichael, 1819)
- Bovichtus oculus Hardy, 1989
- Bovichtus psychrolutes Günther, 1860 (Scaled thornfish) [5]
- Bovichtus variegatus (J. Richardson, 1846) (Thornfish)
- Bovichtus veneris Sauvage, 1879
A genetic review of the South American species found that B. argentinus and the specimens claimed to be of "B. diacanthus" collected off South America were all the same species, the oldest name for which would be B. chilensis, this includes B. elongatus of the Antarctic as a synonym of B. chilensis.[6] This does not appear to have been widely accepted.[4][1]
Characteristics
Bovichtus fishes have a terminal, protractile mouth with teeth on the palatine. There is a robust backwards pointing spine on the operculum. They have a single lateral line and the anterior dorsal fin is spiny and starts above the operculum. The soft rays in the posterior dorsal fin and the anal fin are simple, the rear most anal fin rays are thickened and longer than the front rays. If they have any scales, they are restricted to an isolated patch to the rear of the base of the pectoral fins.[7] They are normally mottled in colour and their gill membranes direct the exiting water upwards, an adaptation for a sedentary benthic lifestyle. In the pectoral fins the lowest rays are unbranched with a thick cuticle, extend a little beyond the membrane and have upturned tips, the rearmost anal fin rays are also structured like this. This is apparently convergent with the unrelated blennies of the subfamily Blenniinae and may be an adaptation for clinging on to surfaces. Any scales present ate cteniod.[8]