True blennies (aka blennioids, to distinguish them from a range
of other, only distantly-related fishes also frequently dubbed 'blennies') are
generally small, elongate fishes superficially reminiscent of gobies and
dragonets, but collectively belonging to six taxonomic families housed within
the perciform suborder Blennioidei. Over 800 species are currently recognised, some
of marine persuasion, some brackish, and some freshwater, but in recent times
this number has decreased by one due to an unexpected taxonomic twist.
It all began in February 1986, when a new species of combtooth blenny
was described by French ichthyologist Dr François Charousset in a paper
published by the periodical Ezhegodnik Zoologicheskogo Muzeya Akademiia nauk
SSSR
and also in a version of it published by Clin d'Oeil, after two
specimens had been collected by him in Mediterranean waters off Croatia's
Istrian coast (specifically in Istria's Zelena Laguna). A small, yellow-headed
blenny, just under 3 in long and commonly
known locally as the midget, such a relatively unspectacular fish and its
discovery would not normally be considered particularly remarkable or
significant.
My collection of cryptozoology books authored by
'the Father of Cryptozoology', Dr Bernard Heuvelmans (© Dr Karl Shuker)
Yet the midget was noteworthy, because it epitomised the
definition of a cryptozoological animal. Namely, a species (or subspecies)
known to the local people sharing its domain, but whose existence has long remained
unconfirmed by science. So it was with the midget, reported by the locals for
several decades but eluding scientific detection until Charousset's collection
of the two Istrian specimens.
Accordingly, Charousset very appropriately christened this new combtooth
blenny Lipophrys heuvelmansi - in honour of veteran cryptozoologist Dr
Bernard Heuvelmans, popularly called ‘the father of cryptozoology’ due to his
seminal work in this emerging investigative science.
A
male specimen of the Caneva combtooth blenny spawning, clearly displaying the
very broad black facial stripe that mature males of this species develop as a
secondary sex characteristic during the breeding season (public domain)
Unfortunately,
however, that honour has now been rescinded for taxonomic reasons. In 2015, via
a scientific paper published in the journal Naturalista Siciliano
(series 4, vol 39, no, 2, pp. 97-103 – accessible online here), a four-strong team of Italian researchers that included marine ecologist
Francesco Tiralongo and cryptozoological researcher Lorenzo Rossi closely compared
the morphology of one of the midget's two procured specimens (which had been preserved in alcohol in the Museum of
Lausanne, Musée Cantonal de Zoologie) with that of a mature male
specimen of the closely-related Caneva combtooth blenny Microlipophrys [formerly
Lipophrys] canevae sampled in Italy's Tyrrhenian Sea during its
species' breeding season. The team could not find any taxonomically significant
differences between the two fishes.
Growing up to 3
in long, M. canevae is native to the Mediterranean and also to the
northeast Atlantic Ocean near Portugal, and for much
of the year both sexes of this species exhibit a uniformly yellow head. During
the breeding season, however, lasting from April to August each year, mature
males develop as a secondary sex characteristic a very broad black stripe
running centrally up their face, from the lower edge of the jaw upwards to the
first ray of their dorsal fin – and of particular significance, this exactly matches
the appearance of the face of the two Heuvelmans midget specimens, both of
which just so happened to have been collected by Charousset in June. i.e. right
in the middle of the breeding season for M. canevae.
Diagram from the paper of Tiralongo et al.
(2015) illustrating the extreme similarity between Heuvelmans's midget
combtooth blenny (A, top) and a mature male specimen of the Caneva combtooth
blenny collected during the breeding season (B, bottom) (© Tiralongo et al.,
2015, reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis only)
Consequently, taking
this and all of the other morphological similarities fully documented by them
in their paper into consideration, the team concluded that the two L.
heuvelmansi specimens were nothing more than mature males of M. canevae.
So, as these two species are apparently conspecific, and because M. canevae
had been formally named and described way back in 1880 (i.e. over a century
before L. heuvelmansi), the team affirmed in accordance with the rules
of nomenclatural precedence that L. heuvelmansi should be considered
hereafter to be merely a junior synonym of M. canevae.
RIP Heuvelmans's
midget combtooth blenny.
My sincere
thanks to Lorenzo Rossi for very kindly bringing his team's revelatory paper to
my attention recently.
A female Caneva combtooth blenny,
lacking the black head stripe that mature males acquire during the spawning
season (public domain)
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