Main Ref. | Keck, B.P. and T.J. Near, 2013 |
Appearance refers to | |
Bones in OsteoBase |
Specialized organs | |
Different appearance | |
Different colors | |
Remarks | Adult males develop brilliant red in the median fins, a red wash in the pectoral and pelvic fins, and many highly contrasting red dots on the side of the body; median fins have dusky pigmentation proximally, concentrated on spines and rays, and are more brilliant red distally. Females never develop bright red dots on the body, and may have subdued reddish brown dots and rarely develop more than a narrow line of red on the distal edge of the spinous dorsal, caudal, anal and pelvic fins. Also females have discrete black dots on the rays of the second dorsal, caudal, anal, pectoral and pelvic fins, and these do not occur in adult males. Males develop red ocelli submarginally on the first three interradial membranes of the spinous dorsal fin (Ref. 93269). |
Striking features | |
Body shape lateral | |
Cross section | |
Dorsal head profile | |
Type of eyes | |
Type of mouth/snout | |
Position of mouth | |
Type of scales | |
Diagnosis |
This species belonging to the N. maculatus species group have scales associated with the postorbital spot on the cheek and show breeding behavior in which males guard clumps of eggs in crevices under rocks (vs. having a completely unscaled cheek and burying clumps of eggs in substrate with no subsequent care in all other species of Nothonotus<>). Within the species group, N. starnesi and N. sanguifluus differs from all other species on the basis of pigmentation patterns, males have red pigmentation covering a high proportion of all the median fins (vs. green median fins in N. wapiti and N. microlepidus; greenish blue anal and pelvic fins in N. vulneratus and N. maculatus); and, the presence of a suborbital bar (vs. absent in Nothonotus aquali). Male nuptial coloration of N. starnesi tends to have less-pronounced darkening of pigment at the base of the first three interradial membranes of the spinous dorsal fin and in the pelvic fins, has much more discrete and contrasting vermiculation on the head and cheek, and has more red in the pectoral fins when compared with N. sanguifluus. In addition, N. starnesi have lower mean numbers for pored lateral line scales, scales below the lateral line, and scales in the most ventral row of the opercle (Ref. 93269). |
Ease of Identification |
Lateral Lines | Interrupted: No |
Scales on lateral line | |
Pored lateral line scales | 51 - 64 |
Scales in lateral series | |
Scale rows above lateral line | 5 - 8 |
Scale rows below lateral line | 7 - 10 |
Scales around caudal peduncle | |
Barbels | |
Gill clefts (sharks/rays only) | |
Gill rakers | |
on lower limb | |
on upper limb | |
total | |
Vertebrae | |
preanal | |
total |
Attributes | |
Fins number | |
Finlets No. | Dorsal |
Ventral | |
Spines total | 12 - 14 |
Soft-rays total | 10 - 13 |
Adipose fin |
Attributes |
Fins number | |
Spines total | 2 - 2 |
Soft-rays total | 7 - 9 |
Pectoral | Attributes |
Spines | |
Soft-rays 12 - 15 | |
Pelvics | Attributes |
Position | |
Spines | |
Soft-rays |