Lasiognathus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lasiognathus
Lasiognathus amphirhamphus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Lophiiformes
Family: Oneirodidae
Genus: Lasiognathus
Regan, 1925
Type species
Lasiognathus saccostoma
Regan, 1925
Occurrences of Lasiognathus

Lasiognathus, the wolftrap anglerfish, is a genus of deep-sea anglerfish in the family Oneirodidae, with six species known from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

It is distinct from other anglerfish for an enormous upper jaw with premaxillaries that can be folded down to enclose the much shorter lower jaw.[1] Its lure apparatus appears to consist of a "complete" fishing rod; the projecting basal bone or pteropterygium being the rod itself; the illicium, a modified dorsal fin ray) being the fishing line; the bioluminescent esca as bait; and hook-like enlarged dermal denticles on the esca.

Lasiognathus comes from the Ancient Greek lasios, meaning "hairy", and gnathos, meaning "jaw".[2] The common names seems to allude to jaw traps; the hinged premaxillae of Lasiognathus resemble the linked jaw-traps employed by trappers to capture large fur-bearing mammals, such as wolves.[3] The genus may also be referred to as the wolftrap seadevils, trapjaw seadevils, or snaggletooth seadevils[4]:369 (with sea devil being a term used for deep sea anglerfish across families).

Description

Only metamorphosed female Lasiognathus have been collected and described; there is presumably extreme sexual dimorphism in size and shape, as with other deep-sea anglerfishes. These fishes have a slender body with a large, slender head measuring over 60% of the standard length. The mouth is huge, with the premaxillaries of the upper jaw enlarged and extending well beyond the short lower jaw. The premaxillaries are separated anteriorly and connected by a broad elastic membrane, and are hinged with the upper jaw so that they are able to flip up and down. When in the latter position, the premaxillaries completely enclose the lower jaw. There are numerous long, hooked teeth placed in roughly oblique rows on the premaxillaries.[5]

The pterygiophore (the basal bone supporting the illicium) of Lasiognathus is unusually long amongst anglerfish, measuring some 85% of the standard length. This bone inserts dorsally on the head and is capable of sliding forwards and backwards within a trough that extends the full length of the cranium and between the epaxial musculature on the front half of the body.[6] The illicium is also long, with a terminal esca and 2-3 bony hook-shaped denticles mounted on an appendage at the tip. The escal bulb is equipped with a flap of skin that allows adjustment of the emitted light. The sphenotic spines (above the eyes) are well-developed, as are the two articular spines (at the rear end of the lower jaw). The operculum is divided into two parts, with the dorsal part split into two (rarely three) branches.[5]

The pectoral fin lobe is small, short, and broad; the fin rays number 5 in the dorsal fin, 5 in the anal fin, 14–20 in the pectoral fins, and 9 in the caudal fin.[7] The skin is entirely naked, without spines or denticles. The coloration is a deep chocolate brown.[5] All Lasiognathus are small fishes; L. amphirhamphus is the largest known species at 15.7 cm standard length.[8] L. beebei attains a maximum length of 11.5 cm,[9] L. dinema 9.5 cm,[10] L. intermedius 12.9 cm,[11] L. saccostoma 7.7 cm,[12] and L. waltoni 9.4 cm.[13]

Systematics

Lasiognathus was originally placed in the family Thaumatichthyidae due to morphological similarities with Thaumatichthys, such as enlarged hinged premaxillaries, escal denticles, and a branched operculum. However, differences between these genera, including features shared with oneirodids but absent in Thaumatichthys, suggested that Lasiognathus may belong elsewhere. Bertelsen and Struhsaker (1977) noted that family placement was somewhat subjective given the unclear cladistics of the Oneirodidae.[7]

While the 5th edition of Fishes of the World still recognizes Thaumatichthyidae as a valid family within Ceratioidei, more recent phylogenetic work using morphological and molecular data (mitochondrial sequences and ultra-conserved elements) has recovered Lasiognathus nested within the Oneirodidae, as sister to Puck + (Chirophryne + Leptacanthichthys).[14]

Species

There are currently 6 recognized species in this genus, which are only distinguishable by the morphology of the esca. This genus was previously considered part of the family Thaumatichthyidae, but is now placed in the Oneirodidae:[14]

This species is characterized by having only two (as opposed to three) bony hooks on its esca, which are lightly pigmented. The distal escal appendage is elongated and cylindrical with a long, compressed prolongation at the tip as in L. saccostoma. The prolongation has six tiny filaments at the tip and no lateral serrations. The posterior escal appendage is broad and laterally compressed.[6]

This species is distinguishable by its hooks being placed on a short, transverse, fan-shaped distal escal appendage as opposed to the elongated, cylindrical appendage of all other species.[6]

This species is similar to any of the five previously described members of the genus, these species is unique in having a cylindrical, internally pigmented, anterior escal appendage and a pair of elongate distal escal appendages.[10]

This species has an elongated, cylindrical distal appendage with a short, cylindrical prolongation at the tip without any lateral serrations or filaments. The posterior escal appendage is cylindrical in shape. Its species name refers to its esca being intermediate in shape between those of L. beebei and those of L. saccostoma and L. waltoni.[5]

This species has a slender, compressed prolongation at the tip of its elongated, cylindrical distal escal appendage, with numerous lateral serrations and distal filaments. Unlike in L. amphirhamphus, there are three escal hooks and they are darkly pigmented. The posterior escal appendage is broad and laterally compressed, and relatively larger than in L. amphirhamphus.[6]

This species is characterized by a membranous anterior crest on its escal bulb, and an elongated, cylindrical distal escal appendage without a prolongation at the tip.[1]

Distribution and habitat

Biology and ecology

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI