Rarely Seen Pufferfish Canthigaster supramacula Collected From West Africa

by | Dec 20, 2016 | Fish | 2 comments

West African Sharpnose Pufferfish (Canthigaster supramacula) from a West African shipment. Credit: Awarma Aquafarm

West African Sharpnose Pufferfish (Canthigaster supramacula) from a West African shipment. Credit: Iwarna Aquafarm


The sharpnose pufferfishes (
Canthigaster) are a diverse lot, with dozens of species scattered across the world’s tropical waters. While a handful of taxa regularly make their way into the aquarium trade, many remain poorly known and are seldom collected. One of the least-documented members is a shallow-water species hailing from the Gulf of Guinea in Western Africa. These poorly explored rocky reefs have a unique fauna home to a large number of endemic fishes (some still awaiting scientific description), and it’s from here that the rarely seen Canthigaster supramacula was recently collected and made its way to Iwarna Aquafarm in Singapore.

C. supramacula from São Tomé. Credit: Luiz Rocha

C. supramacula from São Tomé, still showing a trace of the dark dorsal spot found in juveniles. Credit: Luiz Rocha

C. rostrata, from the West Atlantic. Credit: James Garin

The confusingly similar C. rostrata, from the West Atlantic. Credit: James Garin


At first glance, it would be very easy to mistake this fish for
Canthigaster rostrata, a commonly collected species from the West Atlantic (in fact, it seems the aquarists at Iwarna Aquafarm made just such an oversight with their specimen). Adults of these two geographically isolated taxa are, as best I can tell, identical in outward appearance, and it seems that the only reliable way to delimit them is by knowing where a given specimen originates from. When C. supramacula was described in 2002, the only known specimens were juveniles measuring just 40mm in length. At this small size, this species (as well as its closest relatives) has a large black spot on each side of the body anterior to the dorsal fin. This marking is alluded to in the species’ epithet—supramacula roughly translates from Latin as “ upper spot”—but, as this fish enters adulthood, its namesake maculation disappears entirely, giving way to a beige coloration across the back.

An excited specimen of the Macronesian Sharpnose Pufferfish (C. capistrata). Note the blue spots of the caudal peduncle, which are striated in C. rostrata and C. supramacula. Credit: Sirgfreid

An excited specimen of the Macaronesian Sharpnose Pufferfish (C. capistrata). Note the blue spots of the caudal peduncle, which coalesce into parallel striations in C. rostrata and C. supramacula. Credit: Sirgfreid


With shipments from West Africa being so uncommon in the aquarium trade, it’s likely that this is one of the rarest pufferfishes in captivity, though whether this is truly the first time it has been collected for aquarists (or merely the first time it has been recognized) is hard to say. Even less-attainable is another closely related sharpnose pufferfish,
C. capistrata, found further north at Madeira, the Azores, Cape Verde and the Canary Islands. This fish is a spitting image of its West African and West Atlantic brethren, but it differs in having a dense array of fine, blue spots along the lower sides in adults (vs. posteriorly striated in C. supramacula and C. rostrata).

rostrata-map-revised


The map shown here, from my upcoming review of this genus, gives an idea of where these various taxa occur, including the last two members of the group:
C. figueroidei from South America and C. sanctaehelenae, a divergently patterned beast from the remote islands of the Central Atlantic. It’s not hard to look at these distant populations and see the gears of evolution turning. The subtle nuances which serve to differentiate them hint at a fairly recent split within the group, but precisely when this might have occurred will be unknowable until genetic study is undertaken. Of particular interest is the unusually patterned species found right in the middle. Isolated reefs seem to act as crucibles for evolutionary novelty, on account of their small, inbred populations. In such an environment, a mutation which might get diluted out of a more robust and genetically diverse species can quickly become dominant. A fine example of this is the famed Koi Queen Angelfishes (Holocanthus ciliaris var.) reported from St. Paul’s Rock, another remote speck of land in the Central Atlantic. There’s no word on what the sharpnose pufferfishes look like there, but I imagine they’ll share the same spotted motif seen in the weird little mutants from St. Helena and Ascension Island.

  • Joe Rowlett

    Joe is classically trained in the zoological arts and sciences, with a particular focus on the esoterica of invertebrate taxonomy and evolution. He’s written for several aquarium publications and for many years lorded over the marinelife at Chicago’s venerable Old Town Aquarium. He currently studies prairie insect ecology at the Field Museum of Natural History and fish phylogenetics at the University of Chicago.

2 Comments

  1. Godfried van Moorsel

    I saw Canthigaster supramacula at São Vicente, Cape Verdes. Its occurrence in the Cape Verdes is also described in Wirtz et al. 2013.

    Reply
  2. James Dandar

    There’s one puffer missing from the list that I recently learned about.

    Canthigaster jamestyleri

    Range: N Carolina to the S Caribbean.

    Reply

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