
Bulletin of the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum ( Natural Science) 37: 43-46 (in Japanese).

New record of a rare ophidiid fish, Typhlonus nasus Gunther, 1878 from Japan. FAO Species Identification Guide for Fisheries Purposes. (eds) The Living Marine Resources of the Western Central Pacific. Families Carapidae, Ophidiidae, Bythitidae, Aphionidae. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of pearlfishes, cusk-eels, brotulas and other ophidiiform species known to date. in Nielsen, J.G., Cohen, D.M., Markle, D.F. On the genera Acanthonus and Typhlonus (Pisces, Brotulidae). South African Journal of Science 93(11): 574-578

Observations on the head anatomy of the abyssal ophidiiform genus Typhlonus Gunther 1878, with comments on its phylogenetic relationships. Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of H.M.S. Report on the deep-sea fishes collected by H.M.S Challenger during the years 1873–1876. Preliminary notices of deep-sea fishes collected during the voyage of H.M.S. NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Technical Report NMFS (National Marine Fisheries Service) Circular No. No bank shall open current accounts for customers who have availed credit facilities in the form of cash credit (CC)/ overdraft (OD) from the banking system. Guide to the identification of genera of the fish order Ophidiiformes with a tentative classification of the order. Apagesoma edentatum, a new genus and species of ophidiid fish from western North Atlantic.

Type locality: northeast of Australia and north of Sulawesi, Indonesia, depth 21 fathoms.Ĭarter H.J., 1983. The specific name is from the Latin nasus (= nose), presumably in reference to the large nostrils of this species. Typhlonus is from the Greek, typhlos or tyflos (= blind) and onos (= hake). Scales large, deciduous lateral line absent.
Faceless cc skin#
Head large, bulbous, length about 25% standard length body tapering to a small, slender tail opercular spine weak, flexible, bifurcate, covered with skin in larger specimens premaxillary, dentary, vomer, palatines with very small close-set teeth first four gill arches with small and robust dorsal and ventral gill rakers medial gill rakers long and slender.ĭorsal and anal fins long-based, dorsal fin arising above pectoral fin caudal fin small, slender pectoral fin short pelvic fins reduced to a single, jugular, relatively stout ray. Elsewhere the species is known from scattered localities in the Indo-west-central Pacific: the Arabian Sea, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Japan, off the Marianas, and Hawaii.ĭorsal fin 93-104 Anal fin 71-78 Pectoral fin 24-28 Pelvic fin 1 Caudal fin 8 Branchiostegal rays 7 Gill rakers (1st arch) ii-iv+ I0-13+v-vi Vertebrae 13-14 + 42-45 = 57-60. Ningaloo Canyons, Westtern Australia, and the abyssal plain, from the Coral Sea off Cape York, Queensland (~13 24 S), to off Jervis Bay, New South Wales, in depths between about 3100-4275 m, and in the northern Coral Sea just outside AUS EEZ.
