Lycodichthys

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Lycodichthys
Lycodichthys antarcticus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Zoarcidae
Subfamily: Lycodinae
Genus: Lycodichthys
Paul Pappenheim, 1911[1]
Type species
Lycodichthys antarcticus
Pappenheim, 1911[2]
Synonyms[3]

Lycodichthys is a genus of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Zoarcidae, the eelpouts. They are found in the Southern Ocean.

Lycodichthys was first proposed as a monospecific genus in 1911 by the German zoologist Paul Pappenheim when he described L. antarcticus giving its type locality as the Gauss winter station on the coast of Kaiser Wilhelm II Land in Antarctica.[2][4] The American ichthyologist Hugh Hamilton DeWitt described Rhigophila dearbornii in 1962 but in 1988 this taxon was reviewed by the South African based American ichthyologist M. Eric Anderson and reclassified as the second species in Lycodichthys, making Rhigophila as synonym of Lycodichthys.[5] This genus is classified in the subfamily Lycodinae, one of four subfamilies in the family Zoarcidae, the eelpouts.[6]

Etymology

Lycodichthys combines the name of the Northern genus Lycodes with ichthys, meaning "fish", as this genus closely resembles Lycodes in the shape of the body and fins.[7]

Species

Lycodichthys contains the following species:[8]

Characteristics

Distribution and habitat

References

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