RESEARCH ARTICLE
Review of the bamboo shark genus
Hemiscyllium (Orectolobiformes: Hemiscyllidae)
Gerald R. Allen, Mark V.
Erdmann, William T. White, Fahmi & Christine L. Dudgeon
Abstract
The bamboo sharks, genus
Hemiscyllium, comprises a group of nine species
mainly restricted to New Guinea and northern Australia,
including islands, reefs, and shoals separated from
mainland areas by shallow seas. The Indonesian island
of Halmahera is the only location lying outside the
core region that is inhabited by these sharks. The
nine species in the genus are reviewed and their approximate
distribution documented, as follows: H. freycineti
(Raja Ampat Islands, West Papua); H. galei
(Cenderawasih Bay, West Papua); H. hallstromi
(Torres Strait, Australia and southeastern Papua New
Guinea); H. halmahera (Halmahera, Indonesia);
H. henryi (vicinity of Triton Bay, West Papua);
H. michaeli (Milne Bay Province, Papua New
Guinea); H. ocellatum (northeastern Queensland,
Australia); H. strahani (central coast of northern
New Guinea); and H. trispeculare (northwestern
Australia and Aru Islands, Indonesia). The most reliable
means of identification is color pattern, in combination
with geographic distribution: morphology is less useful
due to considerable morphological variation, mostly
reflecting the highly variable condition of preserved
specimens, and meristic comparisons are limited by
mostly small sample sizes. Therefore, a key to species
based on color pattern is presented, as well as comprehensive
illustrative coverage for each species.
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CITATION:
Allen, G.R., Erdmann, M.V.,
White, W.T., Fahmi & Dudgeon, C.L. (2016) Review
of the bamboo shark genus Hemiscyllium (Orectolobiformes:
Hemiscyllidae). Journal of the Ocean Science Foundation,
23, 51-97.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.164197
publication date: 3 November
2016
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