• Title/Summary/Keyword: Bramidae

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New Record of Brama dussumieri (Pisces: Bramidae) from Korea, as Revealed by Morphological and Molecular Analyses

  • Lee, Woo Jun;Kim, Jin-Koo
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.311-316
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    • 2015
  • Ten specimens of Brama dussumieri (family Bramidae) were collected from waters off Jeju Island, Busan, and Gangneung, Korea, during 2013-2014. The specimens were characterized by having 58-64 lateral line scales and 13-15 gill rakers. An analysis of 567 base pair sequences of mitochondrial DNA cytochrome c oxidase subunit I showed that sequences in our ten specimens are concordant with those of B. dussumieri from the USA, India, and Japan, although with slight differences (genetic distance = 0.000-0.018). Brama dussumieri was distinguished from the most similar species, Brama japonica, by the number of lateral line scales (57-65 in B. dussumieri vs. 65-75 in B. japonica) and the number of gill rakers (13-15 in B. dussumieri vs. 17-20 in B. japonica). We propose the new Korean name "Wae-sae-da-rae" for B. dussumieri in Korea.

New Record of the Bigtooth Pomfret Brama orcini (Pisces: Bramidae) from Korea

  • Lee, Woo Jun;Kim, Jin-Koo;Kai, Yoshiaki
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.497-501
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    • 2014
  • A single specimen of Brama orcini (267.0 mm standard length, SL), belonging to the family Bramidae, was collected by purse seine from Jeju Strait, Korea, in December 2013. The specimen is characterized by having 16 gill rakers, 54 lateral line scales, and 36 vertebrae. B. orcini is distinguished from the most similar species, Brama japonica, by the number of lateral line scales (52-54 in B. orcini vs. 65-75 in B. japonica). We propose a new Korean name "Keun-bi-neul-sae-da-rae" for B. orcini.

First Reliable Record of the Keeltail Pomfret Taractes rubescens (Bramidae: Perciformes) from Korea (한국산 새다래과(Bramidae) 어류 1미기록종, Taractes rubescens (Jordan and Evermann, 1887))

  • Lee, Jae-Hwan;Lee, Woo-Jun;Kim, Jin-Koo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.52 no.3
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    • pp.283-287
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    • 2019
  • Two specimens of Taractes rubescens (family Bramidea) were collected from Busan and Pohang, Korea, between 2015 and 2016. Taractes rubescens was very similar to Taractes asper, but the two species are clearly distinguishable by the number of anal fin rays (21-23 in T. rubescens vs. 25-27 in T. asper) and the presence of a lateral caudal keel (present in T. rubescens vs. absent in T. asper). The mitochondrial DNA cytochrome c oxidase subunit I sequences of the specimens described in this paper perfectly matched those of T. rubescens, but differed from those of T. asper (genetic distance: 6.9%). We use the Korean common name proposed by Kim and Ryu (2017) for T. rubescens, "Geom-eun-sae-da-rae".

First Reliable Record of the Sickle pomfret, Taractichthys steindachneri (Bramidae: Perciformes) from Korea (우리나라 남해에서 출현한 새다래과(농어목) 한국미기록종, 흰꼬리타락치 Taractichthys steindachneri)

  • Kim, Byung-Jik;Kim, Jin-Koo;Ryu, Jung-Hwa;Park, Ji-Tae
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.230-233
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    • 2012
  • Taractichthys steindachneri is described based on two specimens (224.7~406.5 mm SL) collected from the south sea including the adjacent water of Jeju Island, representing a reliable first record from Korea. The species is characterized by having well-separated each pelvic fin, semicircular groove on dorsal surface of caudal peduncle, well-elongated dorsal and anal fin rays, nearly uniformly blackish body color with white margined caudal fin.

First Record of the Pacific Fanfish Pteraclis aesticola (Jordan and Snyder, 1901) in the Tropical Eastern Pacific

  • Aguero, Jose De La Cruz;Gomez, Victor Manuel Cota
    • Ocean Science Journal
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    • v.43 no.3
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    • pp.161-164
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    • 2008
  • One specimen of Pteraclis aesticola was collected off San Jose del Cabo, Baja California Sur, Mexico ($22^{\circ}54'N$, $109^{\circ}45'W$), in March 2007. Present record is the first reported occurrence of the species in the Tropical Eastern Pacific biogeographic region (Gulf of California to southern Ecuadorian waters). Its large fan-like anal and dorsal fins and its counts of fin rays and vertebrae can distinguish the Pacific fanfish from the other species in the genus. This fish may have not yet been recorded in the region because its presence has been overlooked in the past because of rarity and lack of commercial value.

Three Unrecorded Marine Fish Species from Korean Waters

  • Park, Jeong-Ho;Kim, Jin-Koo;Moon, Jee-Hwan;Kim, Cheol-Bum
    • Ocean Science Journal
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    • v.42 no.4
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    • pp.231-240
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    • 2007
  • Three marine fish species are recorded for the first time from Korean waters: a molid (Ranzania laevis, 1 specimen, 279.8 mm SL) and bramid (Pterycombus petersii, 3 specimens, 95.3-214.0 mm SL) collected from a large purse seine off Jeju Island, in the southern sea of Korea, and a carangid (Carangoides dinema, 1 specimen, 194.5 mm SL) from a set net in coastal waters off Busan, in the southeastern sea of korea. R. laevis is characterized by a wedge-shaped body and truncated clavus; P. petersii by the dorsal fin origin above or behind the posterior margin of eye, and dorsal and anal fins depressible; and C. dinema by a row of black blotches along the second dorsal fin base, the curved part of the lateral line longer than straight part, and 18 and 16 dorsal and anal fin rays, respectively. New Korean names are proposed for all three species.

Reproductive biology of 58 fish species around La Réunion Island (Western Indian Ocean): first sexual maturity and spawning period

  • Kelig Mahe;Julien Taconet;Blandine Brisset;Claire Gentil;Yoann Aumond;Hugues Evano;Louis Wambergue;Romain Elleboode;Tevamie Rungassamie;David Roos
    • Journal of Animal Reproduction and Biotechnology
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    • v.39 no.1
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    • pp.31-39
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    • 2024
  • Background: The biological information of fish, which include reproduction, is the prerequisite and the basis for the assessment of fisheries. Methods: The aim of this work was to know the reproductive biology with the first sexual maturity (TL50) and the spawning period for 58 mainly fish species in the waters around La Réunion Island (Western Indian Ocean). Twenty families belonging to the Actinopterygii were represented (acanthuridae, berycidae, bramidae, carangidae, cirrhitidae, gempylidae, holocentridae, kyphosidae, labridae, lethrinidae, lutjanidae, malacanthidae, monacanthidae, mullidae, polymixiidae, pomacentridae, scaridae, scorpaenidae, serranidae, sparidae; 56 species; n = 9,751) and two families belonging to the Elasmobranchii (squalidae, centrophoridae; 2 species; n = 781) were sampled. Between 2014 and 2022, 10,532 individuals were sampled covering the maximum months number to follow the reproduction periods of these species. Results: TL50 for the males and the females, respectively, ranged from 103.9 cm (Acanthurus triostegus) to 1,119.3 cm (Thyrsitoides marleyi) and from 111.7 cm (A. triostegus) to 613.1 cm (Centrophorus moluccensis). The reproduction period could be very different between the species from the very tight peak to a large peak covered all months. Conclusions: Most species breed between October and March but it was not the trend for all species around La Réunion Island.