Four gobiid specimens collected from the western coast of Taiwan were identified as Taenioides snyderi Jordan et Hubbs, 1925, being characterized by 51–55 (total) dorsal-fin rays, 44–46 (total) anal-fin rays, 17–19 pectoral-fin rays, 10 + 21 = 31 vertebrae, 3 paired barbels on the chin surface, the pelvic-fin base fused by membrane to the abdomen, and the pattern of the dermal folds with sensory papillae on the head and body. Taenioides snyderi has been recorded to date only from Japanese waters, although the likelihood of a wider distribution has been suggested by molecular analysis. This study represents the first specimen-based records of the species outside Japan, with data adding to our knowledge of a poorly known fish group.
A new species of the alpheid shrimp genus Richalpheus Anker & Jeng, 2006 is described on the basis of 10 specimens collected from three locations in Kagoshima Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan. Richalpheus laeuadigitus n. sp. appears close to R. palmeri Anker & Jeng, 2006 and R. dahabensis Anker & Dworschak, 2007 among the three known congeners, but differs from R. palmeri in the proportionally wider telson and the more proximally located tip of the antennular stylocerite, and from R. dahabensis in the different configuration of the major cheliped fingers, in particular the possession of a well-developed bulge-like ridge on the occlusal margin of the dactylus. Two sequences of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene from two of the paratypes are newly obtained, and compared with that of R. palmeri downloaded from the GenBank database. The new species is the fourth representative of Richalpheus. Possible association between the new species and other infaunal invertebrates is suggested, although not specified.
Luciogobius punctilineatus n. sp. is described on the basis of 21 type specimens from Kyushu, and the Koshiki and Osumi Islands, southern Japan. It is also found in Kochi Prefecture (Shikoku) and Amami-oshima island (Ryukyu Islands), Japan, confirmed by examination of non-type specimens. The genus Luciogobius includes 15 valid and several undescribed species, and most of them inhabit interstitial spaces of stones and gravel in the intertidal zone. The new species is characterized by the following combination of characters: total second dorsal-fin rays 10–12 (modally 11); total anal-fin rays 12–14 (13); pectoral-fin rays 8–12 (10); vertebrae 16–18 + 22–24 = 39–42 (17 + 23 = 40); pectoral-fin posterior margin slightly concave; pelvic fins united, forming a ventral disc; snout relatively short, length 3.1–4.3% of SL; anus to anal-fin origin (AAA) distance twice body depth at anus, 11.4–16.9% of SL; snout length less than 34.7% of AAA distance; pre-anus length less than 85.5% of pre-anal-fin length; single poorly defined black longitudinal line along mid-lateral body region from behind pectoral fin to caudal-fin base, indistinct anteriorly (line embedded, visible through semi-transparent muscle tissue in fresh or live specimens); black spots forming a single longitudinal row on mid-lateral body surface from behind pectoral fin to caudal-fin base (more distinct in preserved specimens).
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