RESEARCH ARTICLE
Eviota gunawanae, a
new microendemic dwarfgoby from the Fakfak Peninsula,
West Papua, Indonesia (Teleostei: Gobiidae)
David W. Greenfield, Luke
Tornabene, Mark V. Erdmann & Defy N. Pada
Abstract
A new species of dwarfgoby, Eviota gunawanae,
with a cephalic sensory-canal pore pattern lacking
only the IT and NA pores and with the AITO pore positioned
far forward and opening anteriorly, is described from
the Fakfak Peninsula in the Bird's Head Seascape
of western New Guinea, West Papua Province, Indonesia.
It has a dorsal/anal-fin-ray formula of 8/7, 16 unbranched
pectoral-fin rays, the fifth pelvic-fin ray present,
very long anterior tubular nares, a distinctive double
black spot at the caudal-fin base, and no narrow horizontal
line of melanophores crossing the pectoral-fin base.
In life, it has a maroon stripe down the midline of
the body, with elongate white spots above it posteriorly
and two white lines over the abdomen. E. gunawanae
is most closely related to E. tetha. The new
species appears to represent the eighth known microendemic
fish species from this remote reef location in West
Papua, highlighting the biodiversity conservation
importance of the Fakfak Peninsula's reefs.
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CITATION:
Greenfield, D.W., Tornabene,
L., Erdmann, M.V. & Pada, D.N. (2019) Eviota
gunawanae, a new microendemic dwarfgoby from the
Fakfak Peninsula, West Papua, Indonesia (Teleostei:
Gobiidae). . Journal of the Ocean Science Foundation,
32, 57-67.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2616753
.
publication date: 1 April
2019
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