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Zootaxa | 2014

Checklist of the marine and estuarine fishes of Madang District, Papua New Guinea, western Pacific Ocean, with 820 new records

Ronald Fricke; Gerald R. Allen; Serge Andréfouët; Wei-Jen Chen; Mélanie A. Hamel; Pierre Laboute; Ralph R. Mana; Tan Heok Hui; Daisuke Uyeno

A checklist of the marine and estuarine fishes of Madang District is presented, combining both previous and new records. After the recent PAPUA NIUGINI 2012 expedition, a total of 1337 species in 129 families have been recorded from the region. One species and one family is not native (Cichlidae: Oreochromis mossambicus), but has been introduced. The native fish fauna of Madang therefore consists of 1336 species in 128 families. The largest families are the Gobiidae, Labridae, Pomacentridae, Apogonidae, Serranidae, Blenniidae, Chaetodontidae, Syngnathidae and Muraenidae, Scorpaenidae and Lutjanidae, Myctophidae, Acanthuridae, Scaridae, Holocentridae, Carangidae, Pomacanthidae and Tetraodontidae, and Caesionidae. A total of 820 fish species (61.4 % of the total marine and estuarine fish fauna) are recorded from Madang for the first time. The fish fauna of Madang includes a total of 187 species of transitional waters and 1326 species in marine habitats. A total of 156 species of the marine or estuarine species also occurs in freshwater. Zoogeographically, 1271 species have a wide distribution range, most frequently a broad Indo-West Pacific distribution. Among the remaining species, only 8 are endemic to Madang District. Anthropogenic threats to the fish fauna and habitats of Madang District include extensive fishing in Madang Lagoon, sometimes with destructive fishing practices; the discharge of untreated sewage of human settlements, mining and industrial developments into the lagoon and nearby oceanic habitats; and destruction of mangrove habitats by extensive construction work on the shores. These anthropogenic threats may call for conservation and monitoring measures in the near future.


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2014

First records of Parazoanthidae and Microzoanthidae (Anthozoa: Hexacorallia: Zoantharia) from the Red Sea

James Davis Reimer; Daisuke Uyeno; Michael L. Berumen

james davis reimer, daisuke uyeno and michael lee berumen Molecular Invertebrate Systematics and Ecology Laboratory, Graduate School of Engineering and Science, University of the Ryukyus, Senbaru 1, Nishihara, Okinawa 903-0213, Japan, University of the Ryukyus, Senbaru 1, Nishihara, Okinawa 903-0213, Japan, Red Sea Research Center, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Thuwal, 23955, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole 02543, USA


Zoological Studies | 2013

Phylogenetic and taxonomic status of the coral Goniopora stokesi and related species (Scleractinia: Poritidae) in Japan based on molecular and morphological data

Yuko F. Kitano; Masami Obuchi; Daisuke Uyeno; Katsumi Miyazaki; Hironobu Fukami

BackgroundGoniopora stokesi is an uncommon species mainly found in tropical and subtropical regions but was also reported in temperate regions of Japan. This species has two unique characteristics. First, it does not typically attach to hard substrates, i.e., it is free-living. Although non-free-living colonies were reported, it is unclear whether their morphologies exhibit intraspecific or interspecific differences. Second, they can asexually form daughter colonies, which are secondary colonies that grow on the surface (coenosac) of a parent colony and subsequently detach. To date, this specific characteristic has not been reported in Japan, and it is not clear whether this species occurs in Japan.ResultsTo clarify the taxonomic status of this species, we investigated its reproductive mechanism in Japan and morphologically and genetically analyzed specimens collected from both subtropical and temperate regions. We found that this species forms daughter colonies in Okinawa, Japan and that free-living colonies in the temperate region, which were formerly recognized as G. stokesi, likely constitute a morphological variation of a separate species. In addition, all non-free-living colonies with G. stokesi-like morphologies were also morphological variations of other species.ConclusionsOverall, free-living colonies with large, deep calices, thin walls, and well-developed epitheca on the underside were G. stokesi, whereas other free-living and all non-free-living G. stokesi-like colonies belonged to other species, such as Goniopora djiboutiensis.


Systematic Parasitology | 2011

Species of Taeniacanthus Sumpf, 1871 (Crustacea: Copepoda: Taeniacanthidae) parasitic on boxfishes (Tetraodontiformes: Aracanidae and Ostraciidae) from the Indo-West Pacific region, with descriptions of two new species

Danny Tang; Daisuke Uyeno; Kazuya Nagasawa

Two new copepod species of the genus Taeniacanthus Sumpf, 1871 (Cyclopoida: Taeniacanthidae) are described from boxfishes (Aracanidae and Ostraciidae) caught in the Indo-West Pacific region: T. larsonae n. sp. from Ostracion nasus Bloch in the Arafura Sea and off Australia and Tetrosomus concatenatus (Bloch) off Japan; and T. thackerae n. sp. from O. immaculatus Temminck & Schlegel off Palau, O. rhinorhynchos Bleeker off Australia, Lactoria cornuta (Linnaeus) and Ostracion sp. off Japan, and Kentrocapros aculeatus (Houttuyn) in the East China Sea. T. larsonae n. sp. differs from its congeners by having several rows of spinules on the large pectinate process of the antenna and by differences in the shape of the sclerotised plates on the rostral area and structure of the maxilliped. T. thackerae n. sp. can be distinguished from its congeners by differences in the shape of the sclerotised plates on the rostral area, the structure of the maxilliped and ornamentation pattern of legs 1–4. Supplemental information for the female of Taeniacanthusostracionis (Richiardi, 1870) and T. moa (Lewis, 1967), as well as the first description of the male of T. moa, are also provided based on new material collected from ostraciid hosts caught in the Arafura Sea and off Australia, Indonesia and Japan. The four taeniacanthid species reported from boxfishes exhibit variable levels of host-specificity and have broad geographical ranges within the Indo-West Pacific region.


Systematic Parasitology | 2013

A new genus and species of hatschekiid copepod (Siphonostomatoida) from groupers (Actinopterygii: Serranidae) collected off the Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan

Daisuke Uyeno

A new genus and species of copepod, Mihbaicolasakamakii n. g., n. sp., belonging to the siphonostomatoid family Hatschekiidae, is described based on the females collected from inside the tissue of the branchiostegal membrane in three species of the groupers, Epinephelusfasciatus (Forsskål) (type-host), E.merra Bloch and Cephalopholis leopardus (Lacépède), collected off Okinawa-jima Island and Iriomote-jima Island, Ryukyu Archipelago, North Pacific Ocean. The new genus can be distinguished from other hatschekiid genera by a combination of the following characters in the female: the head is composed of the cephalosome and the pedigerous somite; the cephalothorax is expanded into a pair of posteroventral lobes carrying leg 1; legs 1 and 2 are biramous and composed of the protopod and both rami are 2-segmented; leg 3 is absent; and leg 4 is represented by a rounded lobe with a chitinous pointed apical process.


Zootaxa | 2015

Systematic revision of the pennellid genus Creopelates Shiino, 1958 (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida) and the proposal of a new genus.

Daisuke Uyeno

The parasitic copepod Creopelates floridus Shiino, 1958 (Siphonostomatoida: Pennellidae) is redescribed based on postmetamorphic adult females in the collection of the Imperial Majesty of Japan deposited in the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tsukuba (NSMT), Japan. Five new species of pennellid copepods are described based on postmetamorphic adult females from marine actinopterygian fishes newly collected in littoral waters of Japan and the Philippines, in the western North Pacific. The copepods and their hosts are as follows: Creopelates hosinoi n. sp. from Bryaninops yongei (Davis & Cohen) (Perciformes: Gobiidae); C. shirakawai n. sp. from Diancistrus fuscus (Fowler) (Ophidiiformes: Bythitidae); C. lubangenesis n. sp. from Gobiodon rivulatus (Rüppell) (Perciformes: Gobiidae); Nagasawanus akinohama n. gen. et n. sp. from Trimma grammistes (Tomiyama) (Perciformes: Gobiidae); N. snufkini n. gen. et n. sp. from T. tevegae Cohen & Davis. The total number of valid species contained in the genus Creopelates is now five. Nagasawanus n. gen. is distinguishable from other pennellid genera by the following features: antennary processes and cephalic lobes rounded without branched fringes, neck region without processes, maxilla with claw-like terminal segment lacking spinules. Keys to the genera of Pennellidae and to the species of Creopelates and Nagasawanus n. gen. are also provided.


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2015

New records of Lobatolampea tetragona (Ctenophora: Lobata: Lobatolampeidae) from the Red Sea

Daisuke Uyeno; Robert M. Lasley; Jenna M. Moore; Michael L. Berumen

Lobatolampea tetragona Horita, 2000, a member of the monotypic family Lobatolampeidae (Lobata), is reported from the Red Sea based on seven specimens collected during marine biodiversity surveys conducted in the southern and central Red Sea. The ctenophore is characterized by the following characters: paired oral lobes lacking visible auricles and bearing auricular ctenes; subpharyngeal meridional canals bearing aboral blind ends; and c-shaped gonads. Previously, the species was recorded only from Japanese waters. This finding represents the first record of L. tetragona outside of the North Pacific and represents a substantial range expansion for this species.


Zootaxa | 2016

Nippoparasitus unoashicola , a new genus and species of philoblennid copepod (Cyclopoida) parasitic on the Pacific sugar limpet, Patelloida saccharina (Linnaeus, 1758) (Patellogastropoda: Lottiidae) from the intertidal zone of eastern Japan

Daisuke Uyeno; Rie Ogasaka; Kazuya Nagasawa

Nippoparasitus unoashicola, a new genus and species of mesoparasitic copepod, is described based on specimens of both sexes collected from the mantle cavity of the Pacific sugar limpet, Patelloida saccharina (Linnaeus, 1758) (Patellogastropoda: Lottiidae), in the intertidal zone of the Uraga Channel (North Pacific Ocean), Japan. Nippoparasitus gen. nov. differs from other philoblennid genera by two unique characters: the labium is bloated and branched into multiple digitate lobes in female, and the antenna has three claw-like spines on the terminal segment. Nippoparasitus is probably closely related to Myzotheridion Laubier & Bouchet, 1976 with which it shares a series of processes on the terminal segment of the maxilla.


Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory | 2016

Marine benthic community in Shirahama, southwestern Kii Peninsula, central Japan

Masanori Okanishi; Asuka Sentoku; Shinta Fujimoto; Naoto Jimi; Ryo Nakayama; Yusuke Yamana; Hiroki Yamauchi; Hayate Tanaka; Tetsuya Kato; Sho Kashio; Daisuke Uyeno; Kohki Yamamoto; Katsumi Miyazaki; Akira Asakura

We herein present the results of a survey which assessed the benthic fauna from subtidal to continental shelf depth in the Shirahama area from 2012 to 2016. Our research resulted in the identification of 132 species from 75 families in seven phyla, Cnidaria, Annelida, Tardigrada, Arthropoda, Mollusca, Echinodermata and Chordata. This includes 24 newly recorded species to Shirahama. Two species were also new records for Japanese waters. Furthermore, six undescribed species and five potentially undescribed species were recorded. We provide a selection of relevant photos for future taxonomic studies and monitoring of environmental changes.


Systematic Parasitology | 2013

Parasitic copepods from two species of commercial fishes collected off Iraq, with description of Hatschekia shari n. sp.

Daisuke Uyeno; Atheer H. Ali

Two species of parasitic copepods, including one new species, are described based on specimens collected from off Basrah, Iraq (Arabian Gulf). Hatschekia shari n. sp. (Siphonostomatoida: Hatschekiidae) was found from the gill filaments of the spangled emperor Lethrinus nebulosus (Forsskål) (Perciformes: Lethrinidae). The new species is characterised by the following characters in the female: a rectangular cephalothorax with dorsal frame composed of two short and one long bifid longitudinal bars, connecting to one short and one long latitudinal bars; elongate, cylindrical trunk without posterolateral processes or lobes; absence of parabasal papillae; and antennae bearing middle segments without narrow median part and with terminal claws without basal conical processes. Bactrochondria formosana Ho, Lin & Liu, 2011 (Cyclopoida: Chondracanthidae) was found on the gill filaments of the largescale tonguesole Cynoglossus arel (Bloch & Schneider) (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae). Close comparison of the specimens of B. formosana collected from off Iraq with the original description revealed some differences in elements and ornamentations on the body and appendages. Our finding of B. formosana represents not only a new record from the Indian Ocean but also from a new host.

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Kazuya Nagasawa

Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center

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Kazuya Nagasawa

Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center

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Katsumi Miyazaki

Marine Biological Laboratory

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Michael L. Berumen

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Danny Tang

University of Western Australia

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Danny Tang

University of Western Australia

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Hayate Tanaka

Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology

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