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Family Procilliidae Finback Catsharks. Family Characters Small sharks, usually less than 1 meter Two spineless dorsal fins, anal fin First dorsal anterior.

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Presentation on theme: "Family Procilliidae Finback Catsharks. Family Characters Small sharks, usually less than 1 meter Two spineless dorsal fins, anal fin First dorsal anterior."— Presentation transcript:

1 Family Procilliidae Finback Catsharks

2 Family Characters Small sharks, usually less than 1 meter Two spineless dorsal fins, anal fin First dorsal anterior of pelvic fin origin Long, ribbon-like caudal fin –Smooth margin and subterminal notch, low rise above body axis Elongate “cat-eyes” with nictitating eyelids Spiral intestines

3 Eridacnis sinuans Eridacnis barbouri Ctenacis fehlmanni - Harlequin catshark * Eridacnis radcliffei - Pygmy ribbontail catshark Smallest of the Carcharhinidae 15-19cm Eridacnis sinuans - African ribbontail catshark * Eridacnis barbouri - Cuban ribbontail catshark * Largest of the Procilliidae, 200cm Proscyllium habereri - Graceful catshark Proscyllium venustum – (Chinese) Proscyllium magnificum – Magnificent catshark Gollum attenuatus - Slender smooth-hound * Or in Pseudotriakidae, debate dates to 1954 * named by Compagno, 1973, 1984 4 genera, 8 species

4 Differences from Catsharks and Pseudotrikidae Dorsal fin origin anterior of pelvic fin origin –Nearer to Pectoral margin Tall, upright dorsal –Pseudotrikidae elongated dorsal Reproduction –Scyliorhinidae: oviparous, –Procillids: viviparous

5 Reproduction Yolk-sac viviparous –Some debate in 2 genus (Ctenacis and Procillius) but little known Sexual Maturity: 70 cm in Gollum attenuatus Litter size: where reported, 2 pups/litter Pups: measure ~ 10 cm in E. radcliffei –an 18cm female: 1 - 2 pups, 11cm long –G. attenuatus: 100cm female, 44cm young

6 Embryonic development in Gollum attenuatus Mature ovary produces large number of fertilized ova One ova develops into embryo Remaining ova form external yolk sac

7 Feeding and Prey Feeding habits are poorly known Small cuspidate teeth C. fehlmanni has a large pharynx & specialized gill rakers possibly for small invertebrate prey Feed on small teleosts, benthic crustaceans and cephalopods Different head morphologies could indicate varying prey-capture methods

8 Habitat and Distribution Found in mainly in bathydemersal habitat, 50 – 750 m Soft bottoms, continental shelf to slope Tropical to warm-temperate distribution Most with small ranges: Tropical Indo-Pacific, Tanzania, Florida Straits to Cuba. Map: E. radcliffei

9 Proscyllium venustum

10 Newest species Proscyllium magnificum One specimen, three observations –off of (Myanmar) Burma, E. Indian O., Andaman sea –Collected Dec. 3, 1989 Some morphological character differences: –inter-dorsal length, second dorsal placement, labial furrow lengths Held in zoological collections of Australian Museums Ichthyology H 5887-01 Naming competition currently at Fishbase.org –P. magnificum

11 P. Magnificum Awaiting second email response from Dr. Peter Last, identified P. Magnificum as new species in 2004. Hoping for a PDF of the Phuket Marine Biological Center research bulletin.

12 Yano, Kazunari. 1993. Reproductive biology of the slender smoothhound, Gollum attenuatus,collected from New Zealand waters. Environ. Biol. Fishes 38: 59-71,1993. Last, P. R. and V. Vongpanich, 2004. A new finback catshark Proscyllium magnificum (Elasmobranchii: Proscylliidae) from the northeastern Indian Ocean. Phuket Mar. Biol. Center Res. Bull. Vol. 65, pp. 23-29. Compagno, L.J.V., 1984. FAO species catalogue. Vol. 4. Sharks of the world. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Part 2 - Carcharhiniformes. FAO Fish. Synop. 125(4/2):251-655. Bass, A.J. and L.J.V. Compagno, 1986. Proscylliidae. p.87-88. In M.M. Smith and P.C. Heemstra (eds.) Smiths' sea fishes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin. Dulvy, N.K. and J.D. Reynolds. 1997. Evolutionary transitions among egg- laying, live-bearing and maternal inputs in sharks and rays. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B. Vol 264, pp. 1309-1315. DeBruin, G.H.P., B.C. Russell and A. Bogusch. 1995. The Marine Fishery Resources of Sri Lanka. FAO species identification field guide for fishery purposes. FAO, Rome Italy. 446 pgs.


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