McMillan's Whiptail Coryphaenoides mcmillani Iwamoto & Shcherbachev, 1991
[CAAB 37 232051]

Coryphaenoides mcmillani

Distribution map for Coryphaenoides mcmillani CAAB 37 232051
Distribution Map see an interactive map here (new window)

Distribution, ecology and habitat:

temperate waters of the South Atlantic, southern Indian Ocean, southern Africa and Southwest Pacific to off New Zealand; bathypelagic on the continental slope at depths of 950-1400 m.

Size:

to 34 cm TL

Food and feeding:

Reproduction and early life history:

Characteristics:

1D II, 9-11, P i17-i20, V 8-9, GR-I (total, outer/inner series) 11-16/16-19, PC 9-10
Body width across pectoral bases about 2 in greatest depth; dorsal profile tapers sharply below first dorsal, then levels off to end of tail. Head short, moderately compressed, length about 5-6 in total length; Snout bluntly pointed; mouth large, upper jaw extends posteriorly to below hind edge of orbit, rictus to midorbit or beyond. Upper jaw teeth in narrow band, with slightly enlarged outer series; lower jaw teeth in single row. A distinct gap at symphysis separating left and right tooth bands of both jaws is present.
Outer gill rakers of first arch relatively long and flat, triangular to saber- shaped. Gill openings wide, extending forward to under posterior end of maxillary; Outer gill slit moderately restricted. Rakers on inner series of first arch and in other arches generally shaped somewhat like short, laterally flattened, wide-based clubs, the distal margin of the "clubhead" bristling with sharp needlelike spines. Gill filaments short. Chin barbel rudimentary and stumplike. Head lacking stout ridges of large, modified scales; snout naked except for small tubercular scale at tip and lateral angles. The terminal and lateral snout scutes rather small, each isolated around a broad region of naked
Skin. Body scales deciduous, about 8- 10 parallel rows of slender, conical spinules. The pyloric caeca is short, fat and directed generally ventrally. No trace of a luminescent organ in CAS paratype, although abdomen between pelvic and anal fins black. Peritoneum ivory but overlain by black pigmentation
Pectoral fin relatively long, but rays fine, none thickened or notably prolonged; First dorsal fin with a sharp spikelike first spinous ray followed by a long compressed ray armed with a sharp ridge of small serrations along leading edge; Second dorsal fin rudimentary over anterior half or so; origin difficult to determine in some specimens because anteriormost rays rudimentary.

Colour:

In alcohol; overall swarthy, blackish over abdomen behind pelvic fins; operculum and most head membranes black; fins blackish to dusky.

Similar species:

Fisheries:

Conservation Status:

none

Remarks:

Other common names:

Original citation:

Coryphaenoides mcmillani

Iwamoto, T. & Shcherbachev, Y.N. 1991. Macrourid fishes of the subgenus

Chalinura, genus Coryphaenoides, from the Indian Ocean. Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. 47(7): 207-233 [255, fig. 13]

Type locality: 56 km east-northeast of Nowra, N. S. W., Australia, 34°43.95 to 43.98'S, 151°14.74 to 14.28'E

Etymology:

References:

Iwamoto, T. & Graham, K.J. 2001. Grenadiers (Families Bathygadidae and Macrouridae, Gadiformes, Pisces) of New South Wales, Australia. Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. 52(21): 407-509, figs. 1-114.

Iwamoto, T. & Shchervbachev, Y.N. 1991. Macrourid fishes of the subgenus Chalinura, genus Coryphaenoides, from the Indian Ocean. Proc. Calif: Acad. Sci. 47(7): 207-233.

Froese, R. and D. Pauly. Editors. 2007. FishBase
World Wide Web electronic publication
www.fishbase.org, version (05/2007).

Citing this page:

[Fishes of Australia] (2007). McMillan's Whiptail Coryphaenoides mcmillani
Accessed 18 May 2012. http://foa.webboy.net/species/Coryphaenoides/mcmillani in Fishes of Australia http://foa.webboy.net/