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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
December
Researchers discover new species
of fish in Antarctic
Diana Yates,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; diya@uiuc.edu
Released
12/19/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Kevin
Hoefling holds
Cryothenia amphitreta, the Antarctic fish he and
research specialist Paul A. Cziko discovered in
McMurdo Sound in November 2004. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
What’s 34 centimeters (13.39 inches) long, likes the cold and
has an interorbital pit with two openings? The answer is Cryothenia
amphitreta, a newly discovered Antarctic fish discovered by a member
of a research team from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The new species of nototheniid fish, Cryothenia amphitreta, is detailed
in the December issue of the quarterly journal Copeia. Paul A. Cziko,
a research specialist who had graduated with bachelor’s degrees
in animal biology
and biochemistry from
Illinois six months earlier, and research diver Kevin Hoefling, discovered
it in McMurdo Sound in the Ross Sea region of Antarctica in November
2004.
They were diving in the area in search of eggs laid by naked dragonfish
(Gymnodraco acuticeps) for a study, published earlier this year, about
levels of antifreeze proteins in newly hatched notothenioids in the
salty icy waters where the temperature is rarely above the freezing
point of seawater.
“We just came across this fish,” Cziko recalled. “It
was just sitting on the bottom, like most other fish in the area. There
are only about a dozen species that swim in the area, with four to five
easily distinguishable species. This one jumped out at us. First of
all it was pretty big, and it looked quite different than the others.”
Cziko and Hoefling guided the egg-laden fish into a mesh bag and surfaced.
“It was about twice as big as what you normally see swimming around,”
said Arthur L. DeVries, a professor of animal biology who many years
earlier had discovered antifreeze proteins in notothenioids. “Its
profile was much different than other common local notothenioids. Its
center part is much higher. Most of the other species in the area have
big heads and have bodies that taper back narrowly.”
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Click
photo to enlarge |
The
fish was placed into the genus Cryothenia because
of its overall similarity to the notothenioid Cryothenia
peninsulae that has only been found near the Antarctica
Peninsula.
The species name was chosen to help researchers easily
distinguish the two species in the genus Cryothenia,
which translates from Greek as
“from the cold,” while amphitreta literally
means “an orifice with two openings.” |
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Cziko and co-author Chi-Hing (Christina) Cheng, professor of animal
biology, studied the purple-gold-colored fish, comparing its measurements
and perch-like appearance with all known species of fish that inhabit
the icy waters of Antarctica. X-ray radiographs of bone structures were
taken at the U. of I. College of
Veterinary Medicine.
The new fish, which DeVries theorizes may have been looking for a place
to lay its eggs in a flat, clear area near an intake pipe that feeds
water into the McMurdo Station, was placed into the genus Cryothenia
because of its overall similarity to the notothenioid Cryothenia peninsulae
that has only been found near the Antarctica Peninsula.
Although bigger in pelvic-fin length and body size, as well as having
more vertebrae, what sets C amphitreta apart from C. peninsulae is head
morphology, specifically in the area between the eyes.
The new fish has
a “wide, well-defined, two-holed interorbital
pit divided by a raised medial ridge, scales anterior to this depression
in the interorbital region, and a dark pigmentation of the mouth, gill
and body cavity linings,” Cziko and Cheng wrote.
The species name was chosen to help researchers easily distinguish
the two species in the genus Cryothenia, which translates from Greek
as
“from the cold,” while amphitreta literally means “an
orifice with two openings.”
“Even though we know a lot about Antarctica,” Cziko said,
“we still don’t know everything about the ecosystems and
the animals in them. There’s probably a lot more to be learned
about how these fish evolved and survived.”
The area where C. amphitreta was found is the most-frequented location
in McMurdo Sound explored by divers and fished with hand lines. DeVries
has been going to the site for more than 40 years.
The new fish was located on a large flat rock in water that was minus
1.91 degrees Celsius and 20 meters deep.
“Art has been swimming there for more than 40 years,” Cziko
said. “You’d think he would have caught everything.”
DeVries does have an Antarctic fish named after him: Paraliparis devriesii.
National Science Foundation grants to Cheng and DeVries funded the research.
Editor’s notes: To reach Paul Cziko: e-mail pcziko@gmail.com.
To reach Chi-Heng (Christina) Cheng, call 217-333-4245;
e-mail: c-cheng@uiuc.edu.
The original draft of this news release was written by Jim Barlow, who
has since become the director of science communications for the University
of Oregon.
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