2017-11-26 Amazonas

(vip2019) #1
H. H. BOECK

AMAZONAS


■ Pseudomugil reticulatus
■ Pseudomugil novaeguineae
■ ■ Pseudomugil pellucidus
■ Pseudomugil ivantsoffi
■ Pseudomugil luminatus
■ Pseudomugil paskai
■ Kiunga ballochi
■ Kiunga bleheri
■ Pseudomugil furcatus
■ Pseudomugil connieae
■ Scaturiginichthys vermeilipinnis
■ Pseudomugil signatus
■ Pseudomugil mellis
■ Pseudomugil signifer
■ Pseudomugil cyanodorsalis
■ Pseudomugil tenellus
■ Pseudomugil gertrudae

How it all began
The story of the blue-eyes began in 1857, when the
Austrian Navy frigate Novara made a two-year voyage
around the world. It started on April 30 in Trieste, later
to be ceded to Italy by Austria, and sailed to Gibraltar
and Madeira, then on to Rio de Janeiro, the Cape of
Good Hope, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), Madras, the Nicobar
Islands, Singapore, Java, Manila, Hong Kong, Shanghai,
and Sydney. On the way back to Europe, the ship visited
New Zealand, Tahiti, and Chile, returning to Trieste on
November 26, 1859.
This was no holiday cruise—it was a scientific mis-
sion. The scientists on board collected some 23,000
specimens, including 440 minerals, 300 reptiles, 1,500
birds, 1,400 amphibians, 9,000 insects, and 1,330 fish-
es—including a little fish with blue eyes caught between
November 5 and December 7, 1858, near Sydney on the
east coast of Australia. The exact location is not known.
After the trip, the collection was evaluated and scientifi-
cally described.
Austrian zoologist and ichthyologist Rudolf Kner was
tasked with investigating and describing many of the
fishes, including Pseudomugil signifer, whose description
was published in 1866—some 150 years ago. He set up
a new genus, Pseudomugil, for this fish. “Pseudo” means
“fake” or “mock,” and “mugil” refers to a closely related
fish family, the Mugilidae (mullets). The species name
probably refers to the intensely colored fins; “signifer”
means “bearing a sign.” Since this fish inhabits a large
distribution area along the east coast of Australia, some
later collections have been identified by other names, but
they have been synonymized with the passage of time.

After a long pause: new species
Pseudomugil signifer was imported to Germany for the
first time in 1936. I do not know if it was kept in the

aquarium back then. For more than 40 years, it was the
only known species in the genus. It was not until 1907
that a related species was captured from a tributary of the
Lorentz River during an expedition to South New Guinea
led by Hendrikus Albertus Lorentz and preserved. Based
on the specimens collected on that trip, zoologist Max
Wilhelm Carl Weber described the species as Pseudomugil
novaeguineae in 1908. Pseudomugil novaeguineae found its
way into European aquariums only much later.
In the years 1907/1908, Hugo Merton undertook a
research trip to the Moluccas, Indonesia’s Spice Islands,
on behalf of the Senckenberg Nature Research Society.
On February 18, 1908, he discovered a small fish in a
grove of Sago Palms (Metroxylon sagu) on Tarangan, one
of the Aru Islands between New Guinea and northern
Australia. Three years later (1911), Weber described it as
P. gertrudae in honor of Merton’s wife, Gertrud. Pseudo-
mugil gertrudae was also found in Australia, where the
species is widespread. It was introduced to Germany for
the first time in 1982, became established, and today is
one of the most popular blue-eyes.
A great deal of time went by before American ichthy-
ologist R. R. Miller discovered the next species in Aus-
tralia on September 29, 1948, in a tributary of the East
Alligator River. Later on, populations were found at the
Cape York Peninsula and in Papua New Guinea (Bens-
bach River). For a long time this slender species lacked a
scientific identity, but in 1964, W. R. Taylor described it
and gave it the name Pseudomugil tenellus.
During the Fourth Archbold Expedition, organized
by the American Museum of Natural History, to Papua
New Guinea in August 1953, Hobart M. von Deusen
discovered a fish in the Peria Creek near Pumani. Nichols
described it as Pseudomugil furcatus in 1955, but it did
not find its way to Europe until 1981. Barry Crockford
and Gerald R. Allen brought live specimens from near

Distribution map of the
family Pseudomugilidae
(blue-eyes)
Free download pdf