Sebastes

<i>Sebastes</i>

Sebastes

Genus of fishes


Sebastes is a genus of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the subfamily Sebastinae part of the family Scorpaenidae, most of which have the common name of rockfish. A few are called ocean perch, sea perch or redfish instead. They are found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

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Taxonomy

Sebastes was first described as a genus in 1829 by the French zoologist Georges Cuvier, the Dutch ichthyologist Pieter Bleeker designated Perca norvegica, which may have been originally described by the Norwegian zoologist Peter Ascanius in 1772, as the type species in 1876.[3] The genus is the type genus of both the tribe Sebastini and the subfamily Sebastinae, although some authorities treat these as the subfamily Sebastinae and the family Sebastidae, separating the Sebastidae as a distinct family from the Scorpaenidae.[4][5] but other authorities place it in the Perciformes in the suborder Scorpaenoidei.[6]

Some authorities subdivide this large genus into subgenera as follows:[7]

  • Sebastes Cuvier, 1829
    • S. fasciatus
    • S. mentella
    • S. norvegicus
    • S. viviparus
  • Acutomentum Eigenmann & Beeson, 1893
    • S. alutus
    • S. baramenuke
    • S. brevispinis
    • S. entomelas
    • S. flammeus
    • S. hopkinsi
    • S. iracundus
    • S. kiyomatsui
    • S. macdonaldi
    • S. minor
    • S. ovalis
    • S. rufus
    • S. scythropus
    • S. wakiyai
  • Allosebastes Hubbs, 1951
    • S. cortezi
    • S. diploproa
    • S. emphaeus
    • S. peduncularis
    • S. proriger
    • S. rufinanus
    • S. saxicola
    • S. semicinctus
    • S. sinensis
    • S. variegatus
    • S. varispinis
    • S. wilsoni
    • S. zacentrus
  • Auctospina Eigenmann & Beeson 1893
    • S. auriculatus
    • S. dallii
  • Emmelas Jordan & Evermann 1898
    • S. glaucus
  • Eosebastes Jordan & Evermann, 1896
    • S. aurora
    • S. crameri
    • S. melanosema
    • S. melanostomus
  • Hatumeus Matsubara, 1943
    • S. owstoni
  • Hispaniscus Jordan & Evermann, 1896
    • S. elongatus
    • S. levis
    • S. rubrivinctus
  • Mebarus Matsubara 1943
    • S. atrovirens
    • S. cheni
    • S. inermis
    • S. joyneri
    • S. taczanowskii
    • S. thompsoni
    • S. ventricosus
  • Murasoius Matsubara 1943
    • S. nudus
    • S. pachycephalus
  • Neohispaniscus Matsubara 1943
    • S. schlegelii
    • S. vulpes
    • S. zonatus
  • Pteropodus Eigenmann & Beeson, 1893
    • S. carnatus
    • S. caurinus
    • S. chrysomelas
    • S. hubbsi
    • S. longispinis
    • S. maliger
    • S. nebulosus
    • S. nivosus
    • S. rastrelliger
    • S. trivittatus
  • Rosicola Jordan & Evermann, 1896
    • S. babcocki
    • S. miniatus
    • S. pinniger
  • Sebastichthys Gill, 1862
    • S. nigrocinctus
  • Sebastocarus Jordan & Evermann, 1927
    • S. serriceps
  • Sebastodes Gill, 1861
    • S. goodei
    • S. itinus
    • S. jordani
    • S. paucispinis
    • S. steindachneri
  • Sebastomus Gill, 1864
    • S. capensis
    • S. chlorostictus
    • S. constellatus
    • S. ensifer
    • S. eos
    • S. exsul
    • S. helvomaculatus
    • S. lentiginosus
    • S. notius
    • S. oculatus
    • S. rosaceus
    • S. rosenblatti
    • S. serranoides
    • S. simulator
    • S. spinorbis
    • S. umbrosus
  • Sebastopyr Jordan & Evermann, 1927
    • S. ruberrimus
  • Sebastosomus Gill, 1864
    • S. ciliatus
    • S. diaconus
    • S. flavidus
    • S. melanops
    • S. mystinus
    • S. variabilis
  • Takenokius Matsubara, 1943
    • S. oblongus
  • Zalopyr Jordan & Evermann, 1898
    • S. aleutianus
    • S. borealis
    • S. matsubarae
    • S. melanostictus
  • Incertae sedis
    • S. gilli
    • S. koreanus
    • S. moseri
    • S. phillipsi
    • S. polyspinis
    • S. reedi

The genus name is derived from the Greek Sebastos, an honorific used in ancient Greek for the Roman imperial title of Augustus, an allusion to the old name for S. norvegicus on Ibiza, its type locality, which Cuvier translated as “august” or “venerable”.[7]

The fossil record of rockfish goes back to the Miocene, with unequivocal whole body fossils and otoliths from California and Japan (although fossil otoliths from Belgium, "Sebastes" weileri, may push the record back as far as the early Oligocene).[8]

Species

Sebastes contains 109 recognized extant species in this genus are:[9][10]

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Characteristics

Sebastes species have bodies which vary from elongate to deep, and which may be moderately to highly compressed with a comparatively large head. Their eyes vary from large to small. They may have spines on the head or these may be absent, if spines are present these can be small and weak to robust and there can be up to 8 of them. They lack a spiny horizontal ridge below the eye. The jaws have many small conical teeth and there are teeth on the roof of the mouth. The single dorsal fin is typically strongly incised at the posterior of the spiny portion which contains 12-15 robust, venom-bearing spines and to the rear of these are 9-16 soft rays, The anal fin has 2-4 spines and 6 to 11 soft rays. There is a spine in each of the pelvic fins as well as 5 soft rays and these are placed under the pectoral fins. The pectoral fins are large and may be rounded or pointed in shape with 14-22 soft rays, the longest being the central rays. The caudal fin is straight to slightly concave. The lateral line may have pored or tubed scales.[12] They vary in size from a maximum total length of 13.7 cm (5.4 in) in S. koreanus to 108 cm (43 in) in S. borealis.[9]

Distribution

Sebastes rockfish are found in the temperate North and South Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.[12] Rockfish range from the intertidal zone to almost 3,000 m (9,800 ft) deep, usually living benthically on various substrates, often, as the name suggests, around rock outcrops.[13]

Biology

Sebastes rockfish may be long-lived, amongst the longest-living fish on earth, with several species known to surpass 100 years of age, and a maximum reported age of 205 years for S. aleutianus.[13]

Ecotoxicology, radioecology

Like all carnivores, these fish can bioaccumulate some pollutants or radionuclides such as cesium. Highly radioactive rockfish have been caught in a port near Fukushima city, Japan, not far from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, nearly 2 years after the nuclear disaster (ex: 107000 Bq/kg[14] (2013-02-12); 116000 Bq/kg[14] (2013-02-13) and 132000Bq/kg[14] (2013-02-13), respectively 1070, 1160, and 1320 times more than the maximum allowed by Japanese authorities (as updated on April 1, 2012)[14]

Fisheries

Sebastes rockfish are important sport and commercial fish, and many species have been overfished. As a result, seasons are tightly controlled in many areas. Sebastes species are sometimes fraudulently substituted for the more expensive northern red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus).[15]


References

  1. Sepkoski, J. (2002). "A compendium of fossil marine animal genera". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 364: 560. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20.
  2. Eschmeyer, William N.; Fricke, Ron & van der Laan, Richard (eds.). "Genera in the family Sebastidae". Catalog of Fishes. California Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  3. Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2021). "Sebastidae" in FishBase. June 2021 version.
  4. J. S. Nelson; T. C. Grande; M. V. H. Wilson (2016). Fishes of the World (5th ed.). Wiley. pp. 468–475. ISBN 978-1-118-34233-6.
  5. Ricardo Betancur-R; Edward O. Wiley; Gloria Arratia; et al. (2017). "Phylogenetic classification of bony fishes". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 17 (162). doi:10.1186/s12862-017-0958-3. PMC 5501477.
  6. Christopher Scharpf & Kenneth J. Lazara, eds. (22 May 2021). "Order Perciformes (Part 8): Suborder Scorpaenoidei: Families Sebastidae, Setarchidae and Neosebastidae". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  7. "Sebastes Cuvier 1829 (ray-finned fish)". fossilworks. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  8. Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2021). Species of Sebastes in FishBase. June 2021 version.
  9. Eschmeyer, William N.; Fricke, Ron & van der Laan, Richard (eds.). "Species in the genus Sebastes". Catalog of Fishes. California Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  10. Frable, B.W.; Wagman, D.W.; Frierson, T.N.; Aguilar, A.; Sidlauskas, B.L. (2015). "A new species of Sebastes (Scorpaeniformes: Sebastidae) from the northeastern Pacific, with a redescription of the blue rockfish, S. mystinus (Jordan and Gilbert, 1881)" (PDF). Fishery Bulletin. 113 (4): 355–377. doi:10.7755/fb.113.4.1.
  11. "Sebastes". Shorefishes of the Eastern Pacific online information system. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  12. Cailliet, G.M.; Andrews, A.H.; Burton, E.J.; Watters, D.L.; Kline, D.E.; Ferry-Graham, L.A. (2001). "Age determination and validation studies of marine fishes: do deep-dwellers live longer?". Experimental Gerontology. 36 (4–6): 739–764. doi:10.1016/s0531-5565(00)00239-4. PMID 11295512. S2CID 42894988.
  13. TEPCO (2013): Nuclide Analysis Results of Fish and Shellfish (The Ocean Area Within 20km Radius of Fukushima Daiichi NPS <1/13>.

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