Bighead spurdog

Species of shark

Bighead spurdog
Conservation status

Data Deficient  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Subdivision: Selachimorpha
Order: Squaliformes
Family: Squalidae
Genus: Squalus
Species:
S. bucephalus
Binomial name
Squalus bucephalus
Last, Séret & Pogonoski, 2007
Range of the bighead spurdog[1]

The bighead spurdog (Squalus bucephalus) is a rare and little-known species of dogfish shark in the family Squalidae. It is found in deep water south of New Caledonia, and over the Norfolk Ridge. Reaching at least 90 cm (35 in) in length, this stocky shark is brown above and light below, with a broad head and two dorsal fins with long spines. It is the only member of its genus with both one- and three-pointed dermal denticles. An infrequent bycatch of longline fisheries, this species is listed under Data Deficient by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Taxonomy

The first specimens of the bighead spurdog were collected during South Pacific biodiversity surveys conducted by the Institut de recherche pour le développement (IRD). The species was described by Peter Last, Bernard Séret, and John Pogonoski in a 2007 Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) publication. The specific name bucephalus is derived from the Latin bu ("large") and the Greek kephalis ("of the head"). Of the four original specimens, a 56 cm (22 in) long immature male caught over Norfolk Ridge was selected as the holotype. Morphologically, this species belongs to a subgroup of Squalus defined by the shortnose spurdog (S. megalops) and the Cuban dogfish (S. cubensis).[2]

Description

Dorsal view, showing the robust body and broad head of this species

The bighead spurdog is a robustly built, spindle-shaped shark with a hump behind the head. The head is notably broad, and the snout is short and triangular with a blunt tip. The nostrils are preceded by a forked flap of skin. The medium-sized eyes are oval in shape and have a notch in the outside corner; behind them are small, crescent-shaped spiracles. The mouth is nearly straight and bears long furrows at the corners. There are 26–27 upper and 22–24 lower tooth rows. Each tooth has a single angled, knife-like cusp. There are five pairs of gill slits, with the first four pairs small and the fifth pair longer.[2]

The two dorsal fins bear long spines and have narrowly rounded apexes, concave posterior margins, and short free rear tips. The first dorsal fin originates above the pectoral fin insertions; the second is smaller than the first and originates behind the pelvic fins. The pectoral fins are medium-sized with rounded tips, the pelvic fins are small, and there is no anal fin. There are lateral keels on the caudal peduncle. The caudal fin is asymmetrical, with a long upper lobe and a well-developed lower lobe; the trailing margins of both lobes are convex.[2] The skin is covered by tiny, non-overlapping dermal denticles. Unlike other Squalus species, adults have a mix of one-cusped and three-cusped denticles. This species is dark brown above, darkening towards the apexes of the dorsal fins, and pale below. The dorsal fin free rear tips and the caudal fin posterior margin are white. The largest known specimen measures 90 cm (35 in) in length.[2]

Distribution and habitat

The bighead spurdog has only been recorded from the waters south of New Caledonia, and from seamounts on the Norfolk Ridge in the northern Tasman Sea. It has been caught between the depths of 448–800 m (1,470–2,625 ft).[2]

Biology and ecology

Virtually nothing is known about the natural history of the bighead spurdog. Male appear to mature sexually at under 66 cm (26 in) long.[2]

Human interactions

Small numbers of bighead spurdogs are caught incidentally by longliners fishing for ruby snapper (Etelis carbunculus) south of New Caledonia. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) presently lacks sufficient data to assess the conservation status of this species.[1]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Squalus bucephalus.
  1. ^ a b c Finucci, B.; Kyne, P.M.; White, W.T. (2018). "Squalus bucephalus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T161703A116739715. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T161703A116739715.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Last, P.R.; Séret, B.; Pogonoski, J.J. (2007). "Squalus bucephalus sp. nov., a new short-snout spurdog from New Caledonia". Descriptions of new dogfishes of the genus Squalus (Squaloidea: Squalidae). CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research. pp. 23–29. ISBN 1921232412.
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Extant dogfish shark species
Centrophoridae
(Gulper sharks)
Centrophorus
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  • Dwarf gulper shark (C. atromarginatus)
  • Gulper shark (C. granulosus)
  • Dumb gulper shark (C. harrissoni)
  • Blackfin gulper shark (C. isodon)
  • Lowfin gulper shark (C. lusitanicus)
  • Smallfin gulper shark (C. moluccensis)
  • Taiwan gulper shark (C. niaukang)
  • Leafscale gulper shark (C. squamosus)
  • Mosaic gulper shark (C. tessellatus)
  • Little gulper shark (C. uyato)
Deania
  • Birdbeak dogfish (D. calcea)
  • Rough longnose dogfish (D. hystricosa)
  • Arrowhead dogfish (D. profundorum)
  • Longsnout dogfish (D. quadrispinosum)
Dalatiidae
Euprotomicroides
  • Taillight shark (E. zantedeschia)
Heteroscymnoides
  • Longnose pygmy shark (H. marleyi)
Mollisquama
  • Pocket shark (M. parini)
Dalatias
  • Kitefin shark (D. licha)
Isistius
  • Cookiecutter shark (I. brasiliensis)
  • South China cookiecutter shark (I. labialis)
  • Largetooth cookiecutter shark (I. plutodus)
Euprotomicrus
  • Pygmy shark (E. bispinatus)
Squaliolus
  • Smalleye pygmy shark (S. aliae)
  • Spined pygmy shark (S. laticaudus)
Etmopteridae
Aculeola
  • Hooktooth dogfish (A. nigra)
Centroscyllium
  • Highfin dogfish (C. excelsum)
  • Black dogfish (C. fabricii)
  • Granular dogfish (C. granulatum)
  • Bareskin dogfish (C. kamoharai)
  • Combtooth dogfish (C. nigrum)
  • Ornate dogfish (C. ornatum)
  • Whitefin dogfish (C. ritteri)
Etmopterus
(Lantern sharks)
  • New Zealand lanternshark (E. baxteri)
  • Blurred lanternshark (E. bigelowi)
  • Shorttail lanternshark (E. brachyurus)
  • E. bullisi
  • E. burgessi
  • Cylindrical lanternshark (E. carteri)
  • Tailspot lanternshark (E. caudistigmus)
  • Combtooth lanternshark (E. decacuspidatus)
  • Pink lanternshark (E. dianthus)
  • E. dislineatus
  • Blackmouth lanternshark (E. evansi)
  • Pygmy lanternshark (E. fusus)
  • Broadbanded lanternshark (E. gracilispinis)
  • Southern lanternshark (E. granulosus)
  • Caribbean lanternshark (E. hillianus)
  • Smalleye lantern shark (E. litvinovi)
  • Blackbelly lanternshark (E. lucifer)
  • Slendertail lanternshark (E. molleri)
  • Dwarf lanternshark (E. perryi)
  • African lanternshark (E. polli)
  • Great lanternshark (E. princeps)
  • False lanternshark (E. pseudosqualiolus)
  • Smooth lanternshark (E. pusillus)
  • Dense-scale lantern shark (E. pycnolepis)
  • West Indian lanternshark (E. robinsi)
  • Fringefin lanternshark (E. schultzi)
  • Thorny lanternshark (E. sentosus)
  • Velvet belly lantern shark (E. spinax)
  • Splendid lanternshark (E. splendidus)
  • Tasmanian lanternshark (E. tasmaniensis)
  • Brown lanternshark (E. unicolor)
  • Hawaiian lanternshark (E. villosus)
  • Green lanternshark (E. virens)
Miroscyllium
  • Rasptooth dogfish (M. sheikoi)
Trigonognathus
  • Viper dogfish (T. kabeyai)
Oxynotidae
Oxynotus
  • Prickly dogfish (O. bruniensis)
  • Caribbean roughshark (O. caribbaeus)
  • Angular roughshark (O. centrina)
  • Japanese roughshark (O. japonicus)
  • Sailfin roughshark (O. paradoxus)
Somniosidae
(Sleeper sharks)
Centroscymnus
  • Portuguese dogfish (C. coelolepis)
  • Shortnose velvet dogfish (C. cryptacanthus)
  • Roughskin dogfish (C. owstoni)
Centroselachus
  • Longnose velvet dogfish (C. crepidater)
Proscymnodon
  • Largespine velvet dogfish (P. macracanthus)
  • Plunket shark (P. plunketi)
Scymnodalatias
  • Whitetail dogfish (S. albicauda)
  • Azores dogfish (S. garricki)
  • Sparsetooth dogfish (S. oligodon)
  • Sherwood dogfish (S. sherwoodi)
Scymnodon
  • Smallmouth velvet dogfish (S. obscurus)
  • Knifetooth dogfish (S. ringens)
Somniosus
  • Greenland shark (S. microcephalus)
  • Pacific sleeper shark (S. pacificus)
  • Little sleeper shark (S. rostratus)
Zameus
  • Japanese velvet dogfish (Z. ichiharai)
  • Velvet dogfish (Z. squamulosus)
Squalidae
(Dogfish sharks)
Cirrhigaleus
  • Roughskin spurdog (C. asper)
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  • Mandarin dogfish (C. barbifer)
Squalus
(Spurdogs)
  • Spiny dogfish (S. acanthias)
  • S. acutirostris
  • Eastern highfin spurdog (S. albifrons)
  • Western highfin spurdog (S. altipinnis)
  • Longnose spurdog (S. blainville)
  • S. brevirostris
  • Bighead spurdog (S. bucephalus)
  • Greeneye spurdog (S. chloroculus)
  • Fatspine spurdog (S. crassispinus)
  • Cuban dogfish (S. cubensis)
  • Edmund's spurdog (S. edmundsi)
  • Taiwan spurdog (S. formosus)
  • Eastern longnose spurdog (S. grahami)
  • Northern spiny dogfish (s. griffini)
  • Indonesian shortsnout spurdog (S. hemipinnis)
  • Japanese spurdog (S. japonicus)
  • S. lalannei
  • Shortnose spurdog (S. megalops)
  • Blacktailed spurdog (S. melanurus)
  • Shortspine spurdog (S. mitsukurii)
  • Indonesian greeneye spurdog (S. montalbani)
  • Western longnose spurdog (S. nasutus)
  • Bartail spurdog (S. notocaudatus)
  • Western longnose spurdog (S. nasutus)
  • Cyrano spurdog (S. rancureli)
  • Kermadec spiny dogfish (S. raoulensis)
  • Spotted spiny dogfish (S. suckleyi)
Taxon identifiers
Squalus bucephalus