West Indian Ocean coelacanth

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West Indian Ocean coelacanth
Temporal range:
Ma

Critically Endangered  (IUCN 2.3)[2]
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Sarcopterygii
Class: Actinistia
Order: Coelacanthiformes
Family: Latimeriidae
Genus: Latimeria
Species:
L. chalumnae
Binomial name
Latimeria chalumnae
J. L. B. Smith
, 1939
L. chalumnae range in red
Synonyms[4][5]
  • Malania anjouanae Smith, 1953
  • Latimeria anjouanae (Smith, 1953)

The West Indian Ocean coelacanth

ray-finned fishes. The other extant species is the Indonesian coelacanth
(L. menadoensis).

The West Indian Ocean coelacanth was historically known by fishermen around the Comoro Islands (where it is known as gombessa), Madagascar, and Mozambique in the western Indian Ocean,[11] but first scientifically recognised from a specimen collected in South Africa in 1938.

This coelacanth was once thought to be evolutionarily conservative, but discoveries have shown initial morphological diversity.

critically endangered on the IUCN Red List.[2]

Anatomy and physiology

Latimeria chalumnae model in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History

The average weight of Latimeria chalumnae is 80 kg (176 lb), and they can reach up to 2 m (6.5 ft) in length. Adult females are slightly larger than males. Latimeria chalumnae exhibit a deep royal blue color with spots used as a camouflage tactic for hunting prey. Similar anatomical adaptations include the abundance of visual cells such as rods to help see when light is limited.[10] This combined with the West Indian Ocean coelacanth's large eyes aid seeing in dark water.[13]

Similar to cartilaginous fish, Latimeria chalumnae has a rectal gland, pituitary gland, pancreas, and spinal cord. To balance osmotic pressure, these fish adopt an efficient mechanism of osmoregulation by retaining urea in their blood.

Latimeria chalumnae are an ovoviviparous species, which means that they retain their eggs internally until they hatch. They also have low fecundity due to their long gestation period of around 12 months, though not much is known about their age of sexual maturity.[14]

Habitat and behavior

KwaZulu-Natal South Coast
, South Africa

L. chalumnae are usually found between 180–210 m (590–690 ft) of depth, but are sometimes found as deep as 243 m (797 ft)

Beryx splendens, Lucigadus ori and Brotula multibarbata.[16] Their intracranial joint and associated basicranial muscle likely play an important but unresolved role in feeding.[16]

Some individuals have been seen performing "headstands" as feeding behavior, allowing coelacanth to slurp prey from crevices within lava caves.[17] This behavior is made possible due to the coelacanth's ability to move both its upper and lower jaw, which is a unique trait in extant vertebrates that have bone skeletons.[17]

Population and conservation

L. chalumnae is widely but very sparsely distributed around the rim of the western

treaty, the coelacanth was added to Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in 1989. The treaty forbids international trade for commercial purposes and regulates all trade, including sending specimens to museums, through a system of permits.

Discovery

First discovery in South Africa

Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria [length: 170 cm (67 in) - weight: 60 kg (130 lb)]. This specimen was caught on 18 October 1974, next to Salimani/Selimani (Grand Comoro, Comoro Islands) 11°48′40.7″S 43°16′3.3″E / 11.811306°S 43.267583°E / -11.811306; 43.267583
.
Comoran coelacanth at the Comoros Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai

On December 23, 1938, Hendrik Goosen, the captain of the

trawler Nerine, returned to the harbour at East London, South Africa, after a trawl between the Chalumna and Ncera Rivers. As he frequently did, he telephoned his friend, Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, curator at East London Museum, to see if she wanted to look over the contents of the catch for anything interesting, and told her of the strange fish he had set aside for her.[20] Correspondence in the archives of the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity
(SAIAB, formerly the JLB Smith Institute of Ichthyology) show that Goosen went to great lengths to avoid any damage to this fish and ordered his crew to set it aside for the East London Museum. Goosen later told how the fish was steely blue when first seen but by the time the Nerine entered East London harbour many hours later the fish had become dark grey.

Failing to find a description of the creature in any of her books, Courtenay-Latimer attempted to contact her friend, Professor J. L. B. Smith, but he was away for Christmas. Unable to preserve the fish, she reluctantly sent it to a taxidermist. When Smith returned, he immediately recognized it as a coelacanth, known to science only from fossils. Smith named the fish Latimeria chalumnae in honor of Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer and the waters in which it was found. The two discoverers received immediate recognition, and the fish became known as a "living fossil". The 1938 coelacanth is still on display in the East London Museum.

However, as the specimen had been stuffed, the gills and skeleton were not available for examination, and some doubt therefore remained as to whether it was truly the same species. Smith began a hunt for a second specimen that would take more than a decade.

The West Indian Ocean coelacanth was later found to be known to fishermen of the Grande Comore and Anjouan Islands, where it inhabits the slopes of at depths between 150 and 700 meters (500 and 2,300 ft).[18]

The second specimen, Malania anjouanae

A second specimen with a missing dorsal fin and deformed tail fin was captured in 1952 off the coast of

Daniel François Malan, without whose help the specimen would not have been preserved with its muscles and internal organs more or less intact.[21]
It has since been accepted as Latimeria chalumnae.

Taxonomy

The West Indian Ocean coelacanth (Latimeria chalumnae) is allocated to the genus Latimeria, which it shares with one other species, the Indonesian coelacanth (Latimeria menadoensis).[22] From September 1997-July 1998, two coelacanth fish were discovered off the coast of Manado Tua Island, Sulawesi, Indonesia, different from the Latimeria chalumnae discovered near the Comores. The Indonesian coelacanth is identifiable by its brownish grey color.[22]

Genetics

The

Ensembl genome browser.[23]

See also

References

  1. ^ Brouwers L (February 6, 2012). "Coelacanths are not living fossils. Like the rest of us, they evolve". Scientific American Blog Network. Scientific American.
  2. ^ . Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  4. ^ "Part 7- Vertebrates". Collection of genus-group names in a systematic arrangement. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  5. ^ Haaramo M (2007). "Coelacanthiformes – Latimeria-like coelacanths". Mikko's Phylogeny Archive. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  6. PMID 22029904
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  7. OCLC 1006479644.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
    )
  8. ^ .
  9. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2018). "Latimeria chalumnae" in FishBase. February 2018 version.
  10. ^
    PMID 4148821
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  11. ^ .
  12. .
  13. .
  14. ^ .
  15. .
  16. ^ a b c White, Nicholas (2016-03-04). "ADW: Latimeria chalumnae: INFORMATION". Animaldiversity.org. Retrieved 2022-08-23.
  17. ^
    S2CID 24568643
    .
  18. ^ .
  19. ^ Jewett SL (1998-11-11). "On the Trail of the Coelacanth, a Living Fossil". The Washington Post.
  20. ^
    PMID 23598338
    .
  21. ^ Weinberg S (2006). A Fish Caught in Time: the Search for the Coelacanth. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 63–82.
  22. ^
    PMID 10535971
    .
  23. ^ "Ensembl genome browser 78: Latimeria chalumnae - Description".

External links