• Title/Summary/Keyword: tonguefishes

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Feeding Habits of Tonguefishes, Cynogzolssus robustus and Cynoglossus abbreviatus, in the Seto Inland Sea, Japan

  • Baeck, Gun-Wook;Hiroaki Hashimoto;Huh, Sung-Hoi;Kenji Gushima
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Fisheries Technology Conference
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    • 2001.10a
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    • pp.383-384
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    • 2001
  • The tonguefish, Cynoglossus robustus and C. abbreviatus (Order Pleuronectiformes, Family Cynoglossidae), inhabits on soft and sand mud bottoms at depth of 20∼85 m around Korea, China and Japan(Nakabo, 1993; Okamura et al., 1970). The tonguefishes are economically important species and are relatively abundant among the fishes found in the Seto Inland Sea(Inaba, 1963: Inaba, 1988). (omitted)

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Feeding ecology of three tonguefishes, genus Cynoglossus (Cynoglossidae) in the Seto Inland Sea, Japan

  • Baeck, Gun-Wook;Park, Joo-Myun;Hashimoto, Hiroaki
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.325-336
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    • 2011
  • Feeding ecology was compared among the three tonguefishes Cynoglossus abbreviatus, C. joyneri and C. robustus, collected from Seto Inland Sea, Japan, from June 2000 to May 2001. They are benthivores, consuming mainly gammarid amphipods, shrimps, crabs, gastropods, bivalves and ophiuroids. C. abbreviatus consumed greater proportions of ophiuroids whereas C. joyneri and C. robustus ate more amphipods and shrimps. While C. abbreviatus consumed mostly ophiuroids in all size classes, the diets of C. joyneri and C. robustus showed ontogenetic changes in feeding habits; smaller individuals of C. joyneri and C. robustus consumed gammarid amphipods, whereas larger C. joyneri ate shrimps and gastropods, and larger C. robustus fed mainly on gastropods, crabs, bivalves and polychaetes. Cluster analysis based on diet similarities emphasized that the three Cynoglossus species could be categorized on a size-related basis into three feeding groups: smaller C. joyneri and C. rubustus (<25 cm TL) could be classified as group A, and the larger of them (>25 cm TL) as group B, whereas C. abbreviatus was categorized as group C. This means that some degree of resource partitioning can occur among the three Cynoglossus species. The seasonal changes in the diets were also significant for the three Cynoglossus species.

A Taxonomic Revision of the Family Cynoglossidae (Pisces, Pleuronectiformes) from Korea (한국산 참서대과 Cynoglossidae 어류의 분류학적 재검토)

  • KIM Ik-Soo;CHOI Youn
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.27 no.6
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    • pp.803-813
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    • 1994
  • Eight species belonging to three genera in the family Cynoglossidae of Korea are reviewed and provisional keys to species and genera are provided, with synonyms and their distribution. Among them six species collected from 1992 to 1993 are redescribed and figured in the present study; Cynoglossus interruptus, C. joyneri, C. robustus, C. semilaevis, C. abbreviatus and Paraplagusia japonica. Three species of Areliscus rhomaleus. A. trigrammus, and A. hollandi were considered as synonyms of Cynoglossus semilaevis, C. abbreviatus and C. gracilis respectively. Many tonguefishes inhabit commonly in the western and southern coast of Korea. And although Cynoglossus interruptus and C. abbreviatus are restricted only in the southern coast, C. semilaevis in the western and southwestern coast of Korea, Paraplagusia japonica occurs widely along all of the coasts of Korea.

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Re-identification of Two Tonguefishes (Pleuronectiformes) from Korea using Morphological and Molecular Analyses (형태 및 분자분석에 의한 한국산 참서대과 어류(가자미목) 2종의 재동정)

  • Kwun, Hyuck Joon;Kim, Jin-Koo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.49 no.2
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    • pp.208-213
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    • 2016
  • The re-identification of two Korean tonguefishes, Cynoglossus interruptus and Symphurus orientalis, was carried out using eight specimens collected from Korean waters in 2007 and 2013. C. interruptus is characterized by having a single row of scales between rows connected to the supraorbital line and the middle lateral line, 107–113 dorsal fin rays, 86–89 anal fin rays, and 53–55 vertebrae. S. orientalis is characterized by having a 1-2-2-2-2 ID pattern, 97–100 dorsal fin rays, 83–89 anal fin rays, and 52–55 vertebrae. Molecular analysis using mitochondrial DNA Cytochrome Oxidase subunit I sequences showed that specimens of the two species corresponded well to Japanese C. interruptus and Taiwanese S. orientalis, respectively. Therefore, although several reports have raised questions regarding the distribution of C. interruptus and S. orientalis in Korean waters, morphological and molecular data confirm that these two species are indeed distributed in these waters.