DORYRHAMPHUS MELANOPLEURA - (BLEEKER, 1858)
Picture courtesy of: Yves Thévenet
Syngnathe à bande bleue du Pacifique, Bluestripe pipefish, Black-sided pipefish, Pacific bluestripe pipefish, Pacific blue-stripe pipefish, Blaustreifen-Seenadel, Pez pipa chico, Hibashi-yôji, ヒバシヨウジ, 黑腹海龍, 藍帶矛吻海龍,
Synonymes
Doryrhamhus melanopleura (Bleeker, 1858)
Syngnathus melanopleura (Bleeker, 1858)
Doryrhamhus melanopleura (Bleeker, 1858)
Syngnathus melanopleura (Bleeker, 1858)
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Description
Dorsal soft rays (total): 21-29; Anal soft rays: 4; Pectoral ray: 19-23; Body rings: 17-19; Tail rings: 13-17. Body relatively short, trunk much longer than tail; Snout length: 2.0-2.4 in HL; Blade-like ridge dorsally on snout with about 6 pointed projections; Males usually with a fleshy flap on each ventrolateral ridge of snout. Superior trunk and tail ridges discontinuous; Lateral trunk ridge confluent with inferior tail ridge on second tail ring; Principle ridges of trunk and tail with a spine on each ring. Max. length: 7.0 cm TL. Depth range: 2 - 50 m.
Color
Orange-yellow with broad dark blue dorsal stripe continuing darker and narrower onto head to front of snout; Caudal fin orange with large reddish brown blotches and white upper and lower margins.
Etymology
Doryrhamphus: from Greek, dory = lance, spear + from Greek, rhamphos = bill, beak.
melanopleura: from Greek, melas = black + from Greek, pleura = side.
Original description: Syngnathus melanopleura Bleeker, 1858 - Type locality: Nova Selma, Cocos-Keeling Islands, eastern Indian Ocean.
Distribution
Northeastern Indian Ocean and western and central Pacific: Indonesia east to Hawaiian Islands and Tuamotu Archipelago, north to southern Japan, south to Great Barrier Reef (Australia), New Caledonia, Tonga, and Rapa.
Biology
Inhabits coastal to outer reefs, in a variety of habitats including lagoons, reef flats, reef slopes and walls, channels, coral gutters, usually in or near crevices and caves into which they can retreat when threatened. Feeds on planktonic micro-crustaceans as well as feeding by cleaning parasites off other fishes such as moray eels. Often hover in pairs, advertising their presence as cleaner fishes by bobbing up and down and swimming in a waving motion above the substrate. Ovoviviparous (gives birth to live young). Males and females form monogamous pairs. Males brood the eggs on the abdomen in a semi-exposed pouch with lateral skin flaps; Males begin brooding at 33 mm TL. Eggs around 1.0-1.2 mm in diameter. The brood size ranges between 80-150 eggs. The larvae are morphologically similar to adults at birth with a short pelagic stage. Very young larvae (8–13mm) are planktonic, larger stages may settle around 17-19mm, as they have the striped coloration of adults.
Dorsal soft rays (total): 21-29; Anal soft rays: 4; Pectoral ray: 19-23; Body rings: 17-19; Tail rings: 13-17. Body relatively short, trunk much longer than tail; Snout length: 2.0-2.4 in HL; Blade-like ridge dorsally on snout with about 6 pointed projections; Males usually with a fleshy flap on each ventrolateral ridge of snout. Superior trunk and tail ridges discontinuous; Lateral trunk ridge confluent with inferior tail ridge on second tail ring; Principle ridges of trunk and tail with a spine on each ring. Max. length: 7.0 cm TL. Depth range: 2 - 50 m.
Color
Orange-yellow with broad dark blue dorsal stripe continuing darker and narrower onto head to front of snout; Caudal fin orange with large reddish brown blotches and white upper and lower margins.
Etymology
Doryrhamphus: from Greek, dory = lance, spear + from Greek, rhamphos = bill, beak.
melanopleura: from Greek, melas = black + from Greek, pleura = side.
Original description: Syngnathus melanopleura Bleeker, 1858 - Type locality: Nova Selma, Cocos-Keeling Islands, eastern Indian Ocean.
Distribution
Northeastern Indian Ocean and western and central Pacific: Indonesia east to Hawaiian Islands and Tuamotu Archipelago, north to southern Japan, south to Great Barrier Reef (Australia), New Caledonia, Tonga, and Rapa.
Biology
Inhabits coastal to outer reefs, in a variety of habitats including lagoons, reef flats, reef slopes and walls, channels, coral gutters, usually in or near crevices and caves into which they can retreat when threatened. Feeds on planktonic micro-crustaceans as well as feeding by cleaning parasites off other fishes such as moray eels. Often hover in pairs, advertising their presence as cleaner fishes by bobbing up and down and swimming in a waving motion above the substrate. Ovoviviparous (gives birth to live young). Males and females form monogamous pairs. Males brood the eggs on the abdomen in a semi-exposed pouch with lateral skin flaps; Males begin brooding at 33 mm TL. Eggs around 1.0-1.2 mm in diameter. The brood size ranges between 80-150 eggs. The larvae are morphologically similar to adults at birth with a short pelagic stage. Very young larvae (8–13mm) are planktonic, larger stages may settle around 17-19mm, as they have the striped coloration of adults.
Sometimes collected for the aquarium trade, and sold both as curios and for the Traditional Chinese Medicine trade.
Similar species
Doryrhamphus abbreviatus (Dawson, 1981) - Reported from Red Sea, northwestern Indian Ocean: Gulf of Aden.
Doryrhamphus bicarinatus (Dawson, 1981) - Reported from Western Indian Ocean: South Africa, East Africa and Madagascar east to Maldives.
Doryrhamphus excisus (Kaup, 1856) - Reported from Indo-Pacific: East Africa, Persian Gulf, Socotra, Comoros, Madagascar and Mascarenes east to Mexico, north to Ryukyu, Ogasawara (Japan) and Hawaiian islands, south to Western Australia and southern Great Barrier Reef (Queensland).
Doryrhamphus extensus (Snyder, 1911) - Reported from Western North Pacific: Taiwan to southern Japan.
Doryrhamphus japonicus (Araga & Yoshino, 1975) - Reported from Western Pacific: Indonesia east to Philippines and Papua New Guinea, north to Sea of Japan.
Similar species
Doryrhamphus abbreviatus (Dawson, 1981) - Reported from Red Sea, northwestern Indian Ocean: Gulf of Aden.
Doryrhamphus bicarinatus (Dawson, 1981) - Reported from Western Indian Ocean: South Africa, East Africa and Madagascar east to Maldives.
Doryrhamphus excisus (Kaup, 1856) - Reported from Indo-Pacific: East Africa, Persian Gulf, Socotra, Comoros, Madagascar and Mascarenes east to Mexico, north to Ryukyu, Ogasawara (Japan) and Hawaiian islands, south to Western Australia and southern Great Barrier Reef (Queensland).
Doryrhamphus extensus (Snyder, 1911) - Reported from Western North Pacific: Taiwan to southern Japan.
Doryrhamphus japonicus (Araga & Yoshino, 1975) - Reported from Western Pacific: Indonesia east to Philippines and Papua New Guinea, north to Sea of Japan.