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The chimaeras, cartilaginous fishes of the order Chimaeriformes, are also sometimes called "rabbitfishes".
Template:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:TaxonomyTemplate:Taxonomy
colspan=2 style="text-align: centerTemplate:; background-colorTemplate:COLON Template:Taxobox colour" | Rabbitfishes
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A Foxface Rabbitfish (S. vulpinus) meeting a Longnose Butterflyfish (above) in their coral reef habitat
colspan=2 style="text-align: centerTemplate:; background-colorTemplate:COLON Template:Taxobox colour" | Scientific classification
colspan=2 style="text-align: centerTemplate:; background-colorTemplate:COLON Template:Taxobox colour" | Species

About 28, see text

colspan=2 style="text-align: centerTemplate:; background-colorTemplate:COLON Template:Taxobox colour" | Synonyms

Lo

Rabbitfishes or spinefoots are perciform fishes in the family Siganidae. There are 28 species in a single genus, Siganus[1]. In some classifications, the species with prominent face stripes – colloquially called foxfaces – are separated in the genus Lo. But this is now known to be erroneous; indeed some other species like the Masked Spinefoot (S. puellus) show a reduced form of the stripe pattern. Rabbitfishes are found in shallow lagoons in the Indo-Pacific and eastern Mediterranean[2].

Description and ecology[]

Rabbitfishes grow to about 40 cm (15 in)[2] and have small, rabbit-like mouths, large dark eyes, and a shy temperament which gives them their name; the scientific name Siganus is simply the Latin term by which Mediterranean rabbitfishes were known in Ancient Rome[2]. Most species have either bright colors or a complex and interesting pattern.

Another unusual feature among rabbitfishes is their pelvic fins, which are formed from two spines, with 3 soft rays between them. The dorsal fin bears 13 spines with 10 soft rays behind, while the anal fin has 7 spines and 9 oft rays behind; the fin spines are equipped with well-developed venom glands[3]. All rabbitfish are diurnal, some live in school, while others live more solitary lives among the corals. They are herbivorous, feeding on benthic algae in the wild. They are pelagic spawners. Many are fished for food, and the more colorful species – especially the foxfishes – are often kept in aquaria.[2]

In aquaria, they should be fed a variety of fresh vegetables and algae. Care must be taken during aquarium maintenance and cleaning, as rabbitfishes are often easily frightened and will use their poisonous spines in defence. Their poison is not life-threatening to adult humans, but is likely to cause severe pain.

Systematics[]

Siganus puellus

Masked spinefoots (S. puellus) with their foxface-like pattern

As mentioned above, separation of Lo is unwarranted; it is embedded in a subgroup of Siganus. However, a way to split the genus – if the scientific community desires so – has been outlined in 2007:[4]

  • An ancient group containing e.g. S. woodlandi
  • Another fairly small group containing e.g. the White-spotted-Mottled Spinefoot (S. canaliculatus/S. fuscescens) complex.
  • The bulk of the genus, including the foxfaces.

But other lineages might exist and render the somewhat weak distinction between the second and third groups void. Also, it is not known where the type species S. rivulatus would be placed, hence names for these three subgenera or genera are not established at present.

Hybridizaton has played a role in the evolution of the Siganidae, as evidenced by comparison of mtDNA cytochrome b and nDNA Internal transcribed spacer 1 sequence data. There is by now evidence of interbreeding between the Orange-spotted (S. guttatus) and the Golden-lined Spinefoot (S. lineatus), as well as between the Barred (S. doliatus) and the Barhead Spinefoot (S. virgatus).[4]

Also, either females of the last common ancestor of the Masked (S. puellus) and the Gold-spotted Spinefoot (S. punctatus) interbred with females ancestral to the main non-foxface lineage, or males of the former hybridized with females of the last common ancestor of the Peppered Spinefoot (S. punctatissimus) and the foxfaces, while males of the latter mated with females of the original foxface species.[4]

An individual was found that looked like a slightly aberrant Blue-spotted Spinefoot (S. corallinus). On investigation, it turned out to be an offspring of a hybrid between a female of that species and a male Masked Spinefoot, which had successfully backcrossed with the Blue-spotted Spinefoot.[4]

Species[]

As noted above, several presumed species are suspected to actively interbreed even today; these might warrant merging as a single species. This applies to the White-spotted (S. canaliculatus) and the Mottled Spinefoot (S. fuscescens), and to the Blotched Foxface (S. unimaculatus) and the Foxface Rabbitfish (S. vulpinus). Alternatively they might be very recently-evolved species that have not yet undergone complete lineage sorting, but their biogeography suggests that each group is just color morphs of a single species. On the other hand, the morphologyically diverse Blue-spotted Spinefoot (S. corallinus) might represent more than one species; orange individuals are found at the north of its range, while yellow ones occur to the south, and these two may be completely parapatric.[4]

Siganus doliatus - Blaustreifen-Kaninchenfisch

The Barred Spinefoot (S. doliatus) is known to hybridize with the closely related Barhead Spinefoot

Siganus javus

The Streaked Spinefoot (S. javus) is a relative of the foxfaces

Siganus spinus

A school of little spinefoots (S. spinus), relatives of the Mottled Spinefoot

  • Siganus argenteusStreamlined Spinefoot (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825)
  • Siganus canaliculatusWhite-spotted Spinefoot (Park, 1797) (might belong in S. fuscescens)
  • Siganus corallinusBlue-spotted Spinefoot (Valenciennes, 1835) (probably several species)
  • Siganus doliatusBarred Spinefoot Guérin-Méneville, 1829
  • Siganus fuscescensMottled Spinefoot (Houttuyn, 1782)
  • Siganus guttatusOrange-spotted Spinefoot (Bloch, 1787)
  • Siganus javusStreaked Spinefoot (Linnaeus, 1766)
  • Siganus labyrinthodesLabyrinth Spinefoot (Bleeker, 1853)
  • Siganus lineatusGolden-lined Spinefoot (Valenciennes, 1835)
  • Siganus luridusDusky Spinefoot (Rüppell, 1829)
  • Siganus magnificusMagnificent Rabbitfish (Burgess, 1977)
  • Siganus nigerBlack Foxface Woodland, 1990
  • Siganus puelloidesBlackeye Rabbitfish Woodland & Randall, 1979
  • Siganus puellusMasked Spinefoot (Schlegel, 1852)
  • Siganus punctatissimusPeppered Spinefoot Fowler & Bean, 1929
  • Siganus punctatusGold-spotted Spinefoot (Schneider & Forster, 1801)
  • Siganus randalliVariegated Spinefoot Woodland, 1990
  • Siganus rivulatusMarbled Spinefoot Forsskål, 1775
  • Siganus spinusLittle Spinefoot (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Siganus stellatusBrownspotted Spinefoot (Forsskål, 1775)
  • Siganus sutorShoemaker Spinefoot (Valenciennes, 1835).
  • Siganus trispilosThree-blotched Rabbitfish Woodland & Allen, 1977
  • Siganus unimaculatusBlotched Foxface (Evermann & Seale, 1907) (probably belongs in S. vulpinus)
  • Siganus uspiBicolored Foxface Gawel & Woodland, 1974
  • Siganus vermiculatusVermiculated Spinefoot (Valenciennes, 1835)
  • Siganus virgatusBarhead Spinefoot (Valenciennes, 1835)
  • Siganus vulpinusFoxface Rabbitfish
  • Siganus woodlandi Randall & Kulbicki, 2005

Footnotes[]

Template:Reflist

References[]

  • Template:Aut (2004): Family Siganidae - Rabbitfishes. Version of 2004-NOV-22. Retrieved 2008-AUG-31.
  • Template:Aut (2006): Siganus species. Version of 2006-MAR-14. Retrieved 2008-AUG-31.
  • Template:Aut (2007): Phylogenetic relationships and natural hybridization in rabbitfishes (Teleostei: Siganidae) inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear DNA analyses. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 45(1): 69–80. Template:Doi (HTML abstract)
  • Template:Aut (2000): Toxic fish spine injury: Lessons from 11 years experience. J. South Pac. Underwater Med. Soc. 30(1). PDF fulltext

de:Kaninchenfische fa:صافی‌ماهیان fr:Siganidae it:Siganidae lt:Triušiažuvinės nl:Konijnvissen ja:アイゴ科 pl:Syganowate pt:Siganidae sv:Kaninfiskar zh:泥鯭

  1. FishBase (2006)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 FishBase (2004)
  3. Taylor (2000)
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Kuriiwa et al. (2007)
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