Larval development of Pagellus natalensis and what larval morphology indicates about relationships in the perciform fish family Sparidae (Teleostei)
Jeffrey M. Leis, Thomas Trnski and Lynnath E. Beckley
Abstract
We describe the larval development of the sparid
Pagellus natalensis based on 34 field specimens of
2–19 mm from the western Indian Ocean off South Africa.
P. natalensis has unusual larval morphology for a
sparid: in particular, extensive head spination including a serrate
supraoccipital crest, serrate supraocular, pterotic, and supracleithral
ridges, interopercular spines, strong preopercular spination, and pitted
frontal bones. Development in the family Sparidae is briefly reviewed, and
larval development of P. natalensis is central to this
review. We suggest that larval morphology reveals much about sparid
relationships, and pose several hypotheses for further testing. These include:
Pagellus, Pagrus and
Dentex as currently conceived are polyphyletic;
Pagellus affinis, bellottii and
natalensis and Pagrus pagrus are
closely related, as is an unidentified larval sparid from the eastern north
Atlantic; spiny larval morphology is derived within the Sparidae and indicates
that the currently recognized subfamilies are polyphyletic;
Spondyliosoma is monophyletic;
Calamus and Spondyliosoma are
sister taxa.
Keywords: ontogeny, systematics, larva,
Marine and Freshwater Research 53(2) 367 - 376
(2002) doi:10.1071/MF01081





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