In the study, now published in the Journal of Fish Biology, scientists explain that the fish from the rockling family probably remained undiscovered until now due to its small size and its protection-seeking behavior.
Over a quarter of the commercially caught marine fish worldwide belong to the cod family, including Atlantic cod, Alaska pollock, and haddock, which are of particular economic importance. “However, the order Gadiformes also includes much smaller, mostly unknown and poorly studied fish families, such as the rocklings (Gaidropsaridae), which are of little commercial value but have a remarkably wide range,” explains Alexander Knorrn from Senckenberg am Meer in Wilhelmshaven.
Together with Senckenberg researchers and colleagues from Portugal and Spain, Knorrn described a new species from the rockling family as part of his doctoral thesis. The fish, which is around 73 millimeters long and now serves as the holotype of the species, was observed for the first time and collected off the coast of Mauritania at a depth of 595 meters. This is the location of the world’s largest deepwater coral reef complex, the “Mauritanian Wall”, which extends for at least 580 kilometers, with a height between 80 and 100 meters. “The fish species were also observed during eight remotely operated vehicle dives along the Mauritanian coast at depths between 613 and 416 meters,” adds the researcher from Wilhelmshaven.
The new fish species could be distinguished from its congeners based on a combination of different characteristics—including the large eyes and the head, which takes up a quarter of the animal’s body length, elongated ventral fins, and pink coloration. Genetic analyses confirm that this is a previously undescribed species. “This is remarkable, as new vertebrate species are quite rare,” says Knorrn.
The small fish was caught with the help of a grab, along with a variety of live deep-sea animals, including corals such as the framework-forming stony coral Desmophyllum pertusum or the red deepwater gorgonian Swiftia phaeton, as well as larger sponge colonies, bryozoans, brittle stars, annelids, decapod crustaceans, snails, and bivalves. “Also, the video footage shows that Gaidropsarus mauritanicus exclusively lives in the deepwater coral ecosystems,” adds Knorrn, and he continues, “One of the individuals we saw had whitish spots on its skin. It was the only fish we observed seeking shelter under a branched, whitish bryozoan, Celleporina cf. lucida.” The research team cites this presumed territoriality, coupled with a rather protection-seeking habit and the animals’ small size, as the reason why the deep-sea species had remained undiscovered until now.
Coral reefs in the deep and cold regions of the world’s oceans are of enormous importance as “nurseries,” reproduction centers, and hunting grounds for predatory species. Many organisms, such as fish, crabs, bivalves, sponges, and snails, find shelter and food in their calcareous skeletons. The reefs also serve as CO2 reservoirs. But deepwater corals are endangered: oxygen deficiency and ocean acidification are threatening the reefs. Intensive trawling also places considerable pressure on deep-sea corals. “With the name Gaidropsarus mauritanicus, we would like to emphasize that Mauritania has a unique and enormously species-rich marine ecosystem in urgent need of protection,” explains Prof. Dr. André Freiwald, Head of Marine Research at Senckenberg am Meer.
Publication:
Alexander H. Knorrn, Lydia Beuck, David Barros-García, Lourdes Fernández-Peralta, & André Freiwald (2024): Gaidropsarus mauritanicus (Gadiformes, Gaidropsaridae) a new three- bearded rockling from a deep-water coral ecosystem with a genetically verified biogeographical distribution of the genus and notes to its ecology and behavior. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.15859