More than
one-half of the world’s living vertebrates are fishes. With more than 69,000
vertebrate species, one must ask how we know that these facts are true (IUCN 2018). Scientists around the world are continually
adding to our knowledge and the names and numbers keep changing. It’s hard to
check facts in news reports on the fishes. When I took Ichthyology as a student I learned
that there were 18,818 species of fishes in the world. That's no longer true.
The most up-to-date inventory indicates that there are 35,025 valid
species of fishes in the world and 4,109 new species were added in the last ten
years (Fricke et al. 2018). That
averages 411 species per year or more than 1 species per day!
In
1976, Joseph S. Nelson published the first edition of Fishes of the World. It was the definitive source of information
on fish classification and a must-have reference for serious
Ichthyologists. New editions were
published in 1984, 1994, 2006, and 2016.
The Catalog of Fishes maintained by the California Academy of Science provides online information for all fish species
and other web-based databases, such as FishBase
make ichthyological fact checking easier
(Froese and Pauly 2018).
Number of valid
fish species, families, and orders recognized in Fishes of the World by publication year. Data for 2019 from Catalog of Fishes.
Year
|
Species
|
Families
|
Orders
|
1976
|
18,818
|
450
|
46
|
1984
|
21,450
|
445
|
50
|
1994
|
24,618
|
482
|
57
|
2006
|
27,977
|
515
|
62
|
2018
|
32,000
|
536
|
85
|
2019
|
35,025
|
584
|
77
|
The
most recent edition of Fishes of the
World captures the explosion of published research on fishes and the
emergency of 3D scanning, Next-Gen sequencing, molecular systematics, and large
collaborative projects, such as the NSF All Catfish Species Inventory and
Cypriniform, Euteleost, and Chondrichthyan Tree of Life projects. From the most recent Catalog of Fishes, the three largest fish families are the Gobiidae,
Cichlidae, and Cyprinidae. Some
familiar families of fish are monotypic, which means there is only one species. Monotypic
families include the familiar Whale Shark Rhincodontidae, Megamouth shark Megachasmidae, Bowfin
Amiidae, Milkfish Chanidae, Salamanderfish Lepidogalaxiidae, Pirate Perch Aphredoderidae,
Swordfish Xiphiidae, and Louvar Luvaridae.
Top
thirteen fish families (based on number of valid species) and number of
species added in last ten years (Fricke et al. 2019)
Rank
|
Family
Name
|
Common
Name
|
Species
|
New
Species
|
1
|
Gobiidae
|
Gobies
|
1,894
|
332
|
2
|
Cichlidae
|
Cichlids
|
1,720
|
189
|
3
|
Cyprinidae
|
Minnows
and Carps
|
1,695
|
212
|
4
|
Characidae
|
Tetras
|
1,180
|
245
|
5
|
Loracariidae
|
Suckermouth
Armored Catfishes
|
983
|
231
|
6
|
Nemacheilidae
|
Stone Loaches
|
724
|
192
|
7
|
Leuciscidae
|
True
Minnows
|
674
|
75
|
8
|
Serranidae
|
Sea Basses and
Groupers
|
570
|
53
|
9
|
Labridae
|
Wrasses
|
556
|
52
|
10
|
Cynolebiidae
|
Killifishes
|
457
|
128
|
11
|
Liparidae
|
Snailfishes
|
556
|
52
|
12
|
Pomacentridae
|
Damselfishes
|
416
|
33
|
13
|
Blenniidae
|
Blennies
|
404
|
11
|
The
changes in numbers are due to discovery, lumping, splitting, and changes in classification. The snailfishes Liparidae are deepwater fishes and pioneering
video technology is responsible for discovery of many new snailfish species. In other cases, reexamination of collected
specimens may result in splitting species into several new species (e.g.,
Collins et al. 2017). In other cases,
the rarity of the species can explain how it was overlooked until
recently. In other cases, changes in numbers is due to a
wholesale revision of the systematics (e.g., Cypriniformes Tan and Armbruster
2018).
Pseudolithoxus nicoi is an armored catfish endemic to Columbia and Venezula was recently split into two species (Collins et al. 2017. Photo by PlanetCatfish.com |
Among
the new species discovered in 2018, are the Sailfin Fairy Wrasse and the Sunset
Perchlet found during a survey of the deep reefs of Easter Island (Rowlett 2019).
Sailfin Fairy Wrasse, AKA Blue Thorat Fairy Wrasse (Cirrhlabrus cyanogularis) Credit: Y.K. Tea / Tea et al. 2018 |
Sunset Perchlet Plectranthias ahiahiata, holotype,
39.95mm. Credit: Luiz Rocha / Shepherd et al. 2018
|
Novice and
experienced Ichthyologists often struggle with the names of fishes because the
precise meaning of many names is poorly known.
There is no definitive reference for the latinized names given. The local endemic Bigmouth Chub Nocomis platyrhynchus was named from the
Greek platurrhunkhos meaning “broad snouted” In the species description Lachner
and Jenkins (1971, p. 39) wrote "the specific names, platyrhynchus, and
the vernacular name, bigmouth chub, is in reference to the large gape width."
The genus name Nocomis was given by
Charles Frédéric Girard apparently because he liked the sound of the native
American word, Nokomis which means grandmother.
Fish names are researched by The ETYFish project and archived in the Fish Name Etymology Database developed by
Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. In the North America, a group of
fish taxonomist meet periodically and published the Common and Scientific Namesof Fishes form United States, Canada, and Mexico. In the 2013 edition, they report on 3,875
species and 260 families.
Knowledge of fish numbers is essential for estimating extinction rates and providing a baseline for protection of rare and common fishes. Fish taxonomy is an often overlooked specialty and the lack of support for taxonomy is a threat to biodiversity conservation. For example, almost half of the nineteen species of popular black basses Micropterus spp., have been identified in the last twenty years (Taylor et al. 2019). New fish species discoveries are a testament to the perseverance of dedicated taxonomists. But the rate is slow and many cryptic fish species remain hidden or lumped with similar forms due to lack of analysis
References
Collins,
R.A., et al. 2017. Biogeography and species delimitation of the
rheophilic suckermouth catfish genus Pseudolithoxus
(Siluriformes: Loricariidae), with the description of a new species from
the Brazilian Amazon. Systematics and Biodiversity
16:538-550.
De Pinna, M., J. Zuanon,
L. R. Py-Daniel, and P. Petry. 2018. A new family of neotropical freshwater
fishes from deep fossorial Amazonian habitat, with a reappraisal of
morphological characiform phylogeny (Teleostei: Ostariophysi). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society,
zlx028, https://doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlx028
Fricke,
R., W.N. Eschmeyer, and R. van der Laan, editors. 2019. CATALOG OF FISHES:
GENERA,
SPECIES, REFERENCES. (http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp).
Electronic version accessed 9 January 2019.
Froese,
R. and D. Pauly. Editors. 2018. FishBase. World Wide Web electronic
publication.
www.fishbase.org,
version (06/2018).
IUCN Red List of Threatened
Species, Table 1: Numbers of threatened species by major groups of organisms
(1996–2018) Source
Lachner, E.A., and R.E. Jenkins,. 1971. Systematics, distribution, and evolution of the chub genus Nocomis Girard (Pisces, Cyprindae) of eastern United States, with descriptions of new species. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, Number 85. 97 pp.
Rowlett,
J. 2019. Top ten new fish species from
2018. World Wide Web. https://reefs.com/2018/12/27/top-ten-new-fish-species-from-2018/
accessed
9 January.
Tan,
M. and J. W. Armbruster. 2018. Phylogenetic
classification of extant genera of fishes of the order Cypriniformes
(Teleostei: Ostariophysi). Zootaxa 4476
(no. 1): 6-39.
Taylor, A.T., J.M. Long, M.D. Tringali, and B.L. Barthel. 2019. Conservation of black bass diversity: An emerging management paradigm. Fisheries 43
Taylor, A.T., J.M. Long, M.D. Tringali, and B.L. Barthel. 2019. Conservation of black bass diversity: An emerging management paradigm. Fisheries 43