Last Peter R, Pogonoski John J
CSIRO National Research Collections-Australian National Fish Collection, GPO Box 1538, Hobart, TAS, 7001, AUSTRALIA..
Zootaxa. 2020 Mar 30;4758(2):zootaxa.4758.2.2. doi: 10.11646/zootaxa.4758.2.2.
Members of the benthopelagic fish family Euclichthyidae, also known as the Eucla cods, occur on the upper continental slopes off Australasia at 220-1040 m depths. Euclichthyids essentially differ from other gadiform fishes in a combination of two almost contiguous dorsal fins with the second much longer based, a deeply notched anal fin with its anterior portion greatly elevated, jugular pelvic fins consisting of 3 partly united filiform upper rays and 3 free filamentous lower rays, an asymmetrical caudal fin with 5 hypurals fused into two plates, and no chin barbel, or vomerine and palatine tooth patches. Additional characters attributed to the group by other published studies include: no horizontal diaphragm within the posterior chamber of the swim bladder, no swim bladder-auditory capsule connection, presence of a luminous organ, and cranial muscle adductor arcus palatini divided by a strong ligament running from the lateral ethmoid and palatine to the medial face of the hyomandibular. Widely considered to be monotypic since its erection in 1984, the group consists of a single genus and three allopatric species, Euclichthys polynemus McCulloch, 1926 (Western and southern Australia, New Zealand), and two new taxa, E. microdorsalis sp. nov. (northeastern Australia) and E. robertsi sp. nov. (eastern Australia and New Caledonia). Eucla cods are morphologically conservative with both new species superficially resembling the type species, E. polynemus. Euclichthys microdorsalis sp. nov. is the most anatomically and morphologically divergent member of the group in having a shorter first dorsal fin, longer snout, relatively small eye compared to its interorbital width, and fewer caudal-fin rays and primary rakers on the outer gill arch than its congeners. Euclichthys robersti sp. nov. differs from E. polynemus in being smaller with a more slender head, and having a smaller eye, longer anal-fin base and tail, smaller scales, fewer primary rakers on the outer gill arch, more elongate oval otoliths, and usually having a X and/or Y bone in the caudal skeleton (both absent in other Euclichthys). Little is known of their biology but available material suggest that early juveniles remain pelagic in the open ocean with adults benthopelagic near the sea floor. Diagnoses and a key are provided for the three species.
深海中层鱼类欧氏鳕科(Euclichthyidae)的成员,也被称为欧氏鳕鱼,分布于澳大拉西亚大陆架上层斜坡220 - 1040米深处。欧氏鳕科鱼类与其他鳕形目鱼类的主要区别在于:两个背鳍几乎相邻,第二个背鳍基部更长;臀鳍有深缺刻,前部大幅隆起;喉部腹鳍由3根部分相连的丝状上鳍条和3根游离丝状下鳍条组成;尾鳍不对称,5块尾下骨融合成两块;没有颏须,也没有犁骨齿斑和腭骨齿斑。其他已发表研究归属于该类群的额外特征包括:鳔后室没有水平隔膜;鳔与听囊没有连接;有发光器官;腭方肌的头部肌肉被一条从侧筛骨和腭骨延伸至舌颌骨内面的强壮韧带分开。自1984年该类群建立以来,普遍认为它是单型的,由一个属和三个异域分布的物种组成,即欧氏鳕鱼(Euclichthys polynemus McCulloch,1926)(分布于澳大利亚西部和南部、新西兰),以及两个新分类单元,新种小眼欧氏鳕(E. microdorsalis sp. nov.)(分布于澳大利亚东北部)和新种罗氏欧氏鳕(E. robertsi sp. nov.)(分布于澳大利亚东部和新喀里多尼亚)。欧氏鳕鱼在形态上较为保守,两个新物种在外观上与模式种欧氏鳕鱼相似。新种小眼欧氏鳕在解剖学和形态学上是该类群中差异最大的成员,其第一背鳍较短,吻较长,相对于眶间距而言眼睛相对较小,尾鳍鳍条和鳃弓外初级鳃耙比同属其他物种少。新种罗氏欧氏鳕与欧氏鳕鱼的区别在于体型较小,头部更细长,眼睛较小,臀鳍基部和尾部更长,鳞片更小,鳃弓外初级鳃耙更少,耳石更细长呈椭圆形,并且在尾骨骼中通常有X和/或Y骨(其他欧氏鳕鱼没有)。人们对它们的生物学特性了解甚少,但现有资料表明,早期幼鱼在开阔海洋中保持浮游生活,成鱼则在海底附近为深海中层生活。文中提供了这三个物种的鉴别特征和检索表。