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Brief Summary

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The ghost pipefishes (family Solenostomidae) are skin-brooding fishes related to the true pipefishes and seahorses (family Syngnathidae) (skin-brooding involves the attachment of developing eggs to the body surface of a parent). They are found only in the Indian and Pacific Oceans, inhabiting shallow tropical waters associated with rocky crystalline reefs and vegetation. Unlike syngnathids, in which males brood the eggs, ghost pipefish embryos develop within a brood sac formed by the pelvic fins of the female. Wetzel and Wourms (1995) review the anatomy, physiology, and evolution of solenostomid reproductive behavior. According to Kawahara et al. (2008), evidence from phylogenetic analysis of whole mitochondrial genomes indicates that the Solenomostidae form the sister group to Syngnathidae, with the sea moths (family Pegasidae) sister to this pair of lineages. . The family Solenostomidae includes a single genus (Solenostomus) with four or five currently recognized species: S. paradoxus, S. armatus, S. cyanopterus, S. halimeda, and possibly S. leptosoma (Orr et al. 2002; Nelson 2006). The distribution of the genus ranges from the Red Sea and South Africa east to the Maldives, Indonesia, China, southern Japan, Papua New Guinea, and the Marshall Islands and Fiji. Ghost pipefishes are often associated with the marine plant Halophila or the seaweeds Cystoseira or Sargassum and are believed to be limited to depths between ~30 to 40 m, although pairs of S. cyanopterus have been reported from just 3 m. Ghost pipefish look like truncated true pipefish. They have laterally compressed bodies, two separate dorsal fins, a large anal fin that is similar in shape to the second dorsal fin, and a large ventral fin. The head resembles that of true pipefishes, but in Solenostomus the head represents over a third of the total body length, whereas in syngnathid pipefishes the head accounts for at most an eighth of total length. Solenostomids lack scales, but instead develop a dermal skeleton of plates. In females, the ventral fin is enlarged and continuous with the ventral body surface to form a pouch or brood sac for holding eggs (possibly as many as 350). (Fishelson 1966; Orr and Fritzsche 1993; Wetzel and Wourms 1995 and references therein; Orr et al. 2002) External skin brooding has evolved independently in several groups of fishes. Among these, Solenostomus and certain South American catfishes share the development of cotylephores, which are special sites for the attachment of developing embryos (within the fused pelvic fins of Solenostomus and on the ventral surface of Platystacus catfishes and other aspredinid cattfishes of the tribe Aspredini). Cotylephores are transient outgrowths of tissue that occur only on brooding fish. Wetzel et al. (1997) analyze this striking example of convergent evolution. Ghost pipefishes are ambush predators. At birth, juveniles must immediately find suitable shelter to begin feeding and hide from predators. (Werzel and Wourms 1995) The Robust Ghost Pipefish (Solenostomus cyanopterus) has a relatively deep snout; a deep, short caudal peduncle, with a mode of eight caudal peduncle plates; an absence of abdominal spinules; and males with premaxillary spines. It is distributed from South Africa and the Red Sea to the Maldives, Indonesia, southern Japan, Guam, New Guinea, Australia, and Fiji. Orr and Fritzsche (1993) and Orr et al. (2002) should be consulted for detailed descriptions of the morphology and geographic distributions of the recognized ghost pipefish species.
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Diagnostic Description

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Color variable (from brown to pink or yellow) with small black and white spots; 2 elongate black spots between first 3 dorsal spines (Ref. 4263). Total body plates 27-35. Caudal fin truncate, rounded, or lanceolate. Caudal peduncle short or lost in large females (Ref. 48635). Pelvic fin sexually dimorphic, forming a brood pouch in females (Ref. 9829).Description: Characterized by depth of body 15.7-25.0 % SL; least snout depth 4.2-8.2 % SL; depth of caudal peduncle 6.4-15.9 % SL; elongated caudal fin, length 35-52 % SL (Ref. 90102).
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Recorder
Pascualita Sa-a
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Life Cycle

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Monogamous mating is observed as both obligate and genetic (Ref. 52884).
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Susan M. Luna
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Morphology

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Dorsal spines (total): 5; Dorsal soft rays (total): 17 - 22; Analspines: 0; Analsoft rays: 17 - 22; Vertebrae: 32 - 33
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Trophic Strategy

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Uncommon species (Ref. 5463) found in coastal reefs and weedy areas. Always in pairs. Feeds on small crustaceans (Ref. 1602), small crabs, and fish larvae (Ref. 9137).
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Biology

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This uncommon species is found in coastal reefs and weedy areas (Ref. 5463) or lagoon reefs, often on algal flats or seagrass beds (Ref 90102). Monogamous, always in pairs (Ref. 52884). Females carry the eggs in their pelvic fins that are modified to form a brood pouch (Ref. 205). Feed on small crustaceans (Ref. 1602).
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Importance

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fisheries: of no interest; aquarium: public aquariums
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分布

provided by The Fish Database of Taiwan
分布於印度-太平洋海域,西起紅海、東非,東至斐濟,北至日本,南至澳洲等附近海域。臺灣分布於南部、北部及小琉球附近岩礁海域。
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利用

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小型魚類,偶為潛水捕獲,除學術研究及水族觀賞外,不具食用價值。
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描述

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體延長而側扁;身體最高處位於背鰭硬棘部起點與腹鰭起點間;腹鰭至背鰭軟條部及臀鰭間之身體強烈縮窄。頭部延長;吻部亦延長呈扁管狀,背面具細鋸齒緣;鼻部具薄瓣,身體及鰭則無。口小,無齒,具單一觸鬚。背鰭兩個,彼此分離,第一背鰭具V弱硬棘,第二背鰭具17-22不分枝的軟條;臀鰭圓形,與背鰭軟條部相對,亦具有17-22不分枝的軟條;尾鰭圓形、截形或矛尖形;腹鰭大型,與背鰭硬棘部相對 ,雌魚可左右結合而膨大成一育兒囊。無側線。皮膚具數列星狀骨片。尾柄短,較大雌魚甚至消失。 體色多變,由褐色至粉紅或黃色皆有;體側另散佈許多小黑點或白點;背鰭硬棘部前部具兩個延長之黑斑。
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棲地

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主要棲息於岩礁或岩礁周圍之沙泥地海域,尤其珊瑚和海藻生長十分茂盛的海域。其攝食方式是以吸食的方式來攝食較小型浮游動物。大多成對出現。繁殖期時,雌魚的兩個腹鰭會膨大而閤起來形成一個和海馬一樣的育兒囊。
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Robust ghost pipefish

provided by wikipedia EN

The robust ghost pipefish (Solenostomus cyanopterus), also known as the blue-finned ghost pipefish, Racek's ghost pipefish, robust-snouted ghost pipefish, or the squaretail ghost-pipefish,[2] is a species of false pipefish belonging to the family Solenostomidae. Its appearance can vary greatly due to its ability to change colors over several hours, but the general body shape and fin shapes allow it to mimic a piece of seagrass.

Due to a wide range and adaptability to habitat, the robust ghost pipefish is considered a species of least concern by the IUCN. Its natural camouflage abilities allow it to evade predators while seeking out its own prey, which includes bottom-dwelling crustaceans and plankton. It has no teeth, nor proper scales, but scattered osseous plates offer a form of protection.

It has a short lifespan and can only reproduce once. Larvae are planktonic, but are relatively well-developed; the mother releases them into the water column from her brood-pouch, which is a sexually-dimorphic feature formed from her two pelvic fins.

Taxonomy

The robust ghost pipefish was originally described by Dutch ichthyologist Pieter Bleeker in 1854. It also momentarily went by Solenostomus bleekerii, given by French zoologist André Marie Constant Duméril to honor Bleeker in 1870, but this name has since been synonymized. The name Solenichthys raceki was also in consideration, given by Australian ichthyologist Gilbert Percy Whitley in 1955.[3]

The family to which the robust ghost pipefish belongs, Solenostomidae, is related to the family of true pipefishes and seahorses, Syngnathidae, and they share the order Syngnathiformes.[4] Similarities can be seen in the elongated snouts, but there are various differences between families. These include females caring for the eggs in Solenostomidae, versus males in Syngnathidae, and a spiny dorsal fin versus the absence of spines.[5]

There is the distinct possibility that Solenostomus cyanopterus may be a cryptic species - that is, several species currently considered synonymous due to significant overlap in various areas. Its wide range, variable appearance, and somewhat-understudied nature all contribute to this possibility.[6][7]

Solenostomidae itself is a monotypic taxon, home only to the genus Solenostomus.[8]

Etymology

The genus name "solenostomus" comes from Greek; "solen" means "tube", and "stoma" means "mouth" or "opening".[9] The word "cyanopterus" is also from Greek, and is from "cyanos", meaning "blue", and "pteron", meaning "wing". This is in reference to the dark-blue spots frequently present on the first few spiny rays of the dorsal fin.[2][6]

The common name "ghost pipefish" originates in the camouflage abilities of the genus.[10] "Robust" specifically refers to the largest species.

Description

Solenostomus cyanopterus at Sharm el Sheik

The robust ghost pipefish can reach a length of 17 cm (6.7 in) in total length (TL),[9] which makes it the largest of the ghost pipefishes.[11] It has a long snout, with the mouth positioned at the end, and the jaws are largely toothless. Its tail is also long in comparison to its body. [12] The caudal fin may be truncated, rounded, or lanceolate, and the caudal peduncle is quite short, sometimes absent.[9] Its appearance, with a long slender snout and large fins, helps it mimic a piece of drifting seagrass.[11]

The body may be gray, brown, pink, yellow, or bright green, with small black and white dots, and the robust ghost pipefish is capable of gradual color changes depending upon its environment (taking 24 to 36 hours).[1][13] There are several dark-blue spots on the first few spiny rays of the dorsal fin that may appear black in preserved specimens.[2][12] It is largely scaleless, but there are 25–35 stellate (star-shaped) bony plates on the skin.[6] The lateral line is not visible.[3]

Sexual dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism in the robust ghost pipefish manifests in multiple ways. In males, the pelvic fins remain unchanged, but in females, they merge to form a brood pouch.[9] In addition, females are the larger of the two sexes.[2] The olfactory organ is a smooth pit in females, but is equipped with radiating folds (called lamellae) in the males.[12]

Distribution and habitat

Solenostomus cyanopterus, conventional and X-ray images

This species lives in the Red Sea and in the tropical Indo-Pacific, from the coast of East Africa to Fiji, southern Japan, and Australia.[9] Its wide range increases its general chances for survival as a species, and it can adapt to a variety of habitats therein. While the larvae and young are largely pelagic, adults can be found on coastal reefs and weedy areas, at depths of 2–25 m (6 ft 7 in – 82 ft 0 in). Their preferred substrates include coral, vegetation, and sand.[1]

Presence in aquaria

The robust ghost pipefish is possibly taken from the wild for the aquarium trade, but not at such a rate that its population numbers are suffering.[1] Hobbyists, while aware of the fish, advise that it is best left to public aquariums to keep captive specimens.[14] There is at least one record of another species of ghost pipefish reproducing in captivity,[10] but records for Solenostomus cyanopterus specifically are sparse.

Ecology and behavior

The robust ghost pipefish is a slow-moving and placid species.[1] When disturbed, it will often move into nearby shelter, such as seagrass for camouflage or coral for protection.[11] The lifespan is relatively short, consisting of a single reproductive period before death.[6]

Diet and feeding

Robust ghost pipefish are bottom-feeders, swimming snout-down near the substrate to capture any benthic invertebrates they come across.[7] Because they are slow-moving, they largely rely on their own camouflage to employ ambush hunting.[1] Their tube-shaped snouts have no teeth, so they simply suck up their prey whole.[7]

Reproduction

Unlike any other fishes in the order Syngnathiformes, female members of Solenostomus take care of the eggs (rather than the male). The two pelvic fins unite to form a brood-pouch in which the eggs are protected.[15] Each fish reproduces only once during its life cycle, and members of the species form pairs for life.[6]

Egg envelopes are attached to small extensions of the skin only present in female specimens, where they can safely incubate inside of the brood-pouch.[4] When the eggs are ready to hatch, the female releases them into the water column, where the larvae drift with the currents.[7] The larvae are well-developed, approximately 3 mm long, with fully-formed eyes, mouths, and spines.[2]

Conservation status

The robust ghost pipefish is a species of least concern for the IUCN. It has a wide range, well-adapted camouflage abilities, and can withstand a variety of habitat conditions; all of these support a high survivability rate for the species.[1] It is of little interest to the ornamental fish industry due to a short lifespan and failure to thrive in captivity, so it is not at risk for over-collection.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Dick, K. & Pollom, R. (2017) [errata version of 2016 assessment]. "Solenostomus cyanopterus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T65363316A115407689. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T65363316A67621178.en.
  2. ^ a b c d e Bray, D.J.; Thompson, V.J. (2021). "Robust Ghostpipefish, Solenostomus cyanopterus Bleeker 1855". Fishes of Australia. Retrieved 4 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b "Solenostomus cyanopterus". Global Biodiversity Information Facility. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  4. ^ a b Wetzel, James; Wourms, John P. (December 1995). "Adaptations for reproduction and development in the skin-brooding ghost pipefishes,Solenostomus". Environmental Biology of Fishes. 44 (4): 363–384. doi:10.1007/BF00008252. ISSN 0378-1909. S2CID 29144170.
  5. ^ Yim, Hu-Soon; Park, Jeong-Ho; Han, Kyeong-Ho (31 December 2007). "First Record of Ghost Pipefish, Solenostomus cyanopterus (Solenostomidae: Gasterosteiformes) from Korea". The Ichthyological Society of Korea. 19 (4): 360–364.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Mazza, Giuseppe (15 May 2022). "Solenostomus cyanopterus". Monaco Nature Encyclopedia. Retrieved 4 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ a b c d "Solenostomus cyanopterus Bleeker, 1854". Atlas of Living Australia. Retrieved 3 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2023). "Solenostomidae" in FishBase. March 2023 version.
  9. ^ a b c d e Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2018). "Solenostomus cyanopterus" in FishBase. February 2018 version.
  10. ^ a b Ricciardi, Francesco (August 2014). "The Cryptic Life of Ghost Pipefishes". Tropical Fish Hobbyist Magazone. pp. 76–80. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  11. ^ a b c McGrouther, Mark (22 January 2019). "Robust Ghostpipefish, Solenostomus cyanopterus Bleeker,1855". Australian Museum. Retrieved 3 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ a b c Weber, Max; de Beaufort, L. F. (1922). "Heteromi, Solenichthyes, Synentognathi, Percesoces, Labyrinthici, Microcyprini". The fishes of the Indo-Australian Archipelago (4 ed.). Leiden: E.J. Brill, Ltd. pp. 24–27. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.12497. LCCN 30007996. OCLC 1572939.
  13. ^ Gerlach, Oliver (2009). "Colour change in the ghost pipefish Solenostomus cyanopterus" (PDF). Phelsuma. 17: 59–60.
  14. ^ Goemans, Bob (2012). "Solenostomus cyanopterus Bleeker, 1854 - Robust Ghost Pipefish". Saltcorner. Retrieved 3 March 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ Orr, James Wilder; Fritzsche, Ronald A. (1993-02-11). "Revision of the Ghost Pipefishes, Family Solenostomidae (Teleostei: Syngnathoidei)". Copeia. 1993 (1): 168. doi:10.2307/1446307. JSTOR 1446307.
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Robust ghost pipefish: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The robust ghost pipefish (Solenostomus cyanopterus), also known as the blue-finned ghost pipefish, Racek's ghost pipefish, robust-snouted ghost pipefish, or the squaretail ghost-pipefish, is a species of false pipefish belonging to the family Solenostomidae. Its appearance can vary greatly due to its ability to change colors over several hours, but the general body shape and fin shapes allow it to mimic a piece of seagrass.

Due to a wide range and adaptability to habitat, the robust ghost pipefish is considered a species of least concern by the IUCN. Its natural camouflage abilities allow it to evade predators while seeking out its own prey, which includes bottom-dwelling crustaceans and plankton. It has no teeth, nor proper scales, but scattered osseous plates offer a form of protection.

It has a short lifespan and can only reproduce once. Larvae are planktonic, but are relatively well-developed; the mother releases them into the water column from her brood-pouch, which is a sexually-dimorphic feature formed from her two pelvic fins.

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Description

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Inhabits coastal reefs and weedy areas. Always found in pairs. Feeds on small crustaceans (Ref. 1602).

Reference

Froese, R. & D. Pauly (Editors). (2023). FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication. version (02/2023).

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