Scientific papers by two HRI doctoral students published in national journals
Doug Weaver
The journal Copeia published a new paper by Doug Weaver, a
TAMU-CC doctoral student, in the January issue. Doug is a Ruth Campbell Fellow working
in the laboratory of HRI Research Associate Dr. Ian MacDonald on the community ecology and
habitat association of coral reef fishes. The paper was co-authored
by Dr. Luiz Rocha of the University of Hawaii’s Institute of Marine
Biology.
The paper describes a new species of wrasse, commonly known as the
Mardi Gras wrasse, documented from the Flower Garden Banks National
Marine Sanctuary (FGBNMS) in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico. The
scientific name, Halichoeres burekae, was given to honor Joyce and
Frank Burek, underwater photographers who first documented the
species in the sanctuary. Subsequent to its discovery,
this species
is also known from the coral reef communities off the coast of Veracruz, Mexico, and has also been reported from Seven and One Half
Fathom Reef located offshore of Padre Island.
AT RIGHT: The Mardi Gras wrasse (Halichoeres
burekae) described from the western Gulf of Mexico.
Male (A) and Female (B). Click to enlarge.
Recent fish surveys conducted on Veracruz coral reefs indicate it is one of the
top five most abundant fishes, while it exhibits episodic
recruitment to the FGBNMS. After the initial discovery and
collection of a holotype and paratype in 2002, this species was
absent from the sanctuary until 2006, when over a thousand
individuals were observed at Stetson Bank.
The mardi gras wrasse is unique among western Atlantic wrasses in
that it is one of only three plankton-feeders (out of twelve members
of the genus), and is closely related to the widespread rainbow
wrasse, found throughout the Caribbean and Florida Keys, and
Halichoeres socialis, a small species known only from mangrove
islands of Belize. Unlike its close relatives, the male Mardi Gras
wrasse has well-developed tusks believed to be used in courtship and
territorial defense.
Weaver, D. C. and L. A. Rocha. 2007. A New Species of
Halichoeres (Teleostei: Labridae) from the Western Gulf of Mexico.
Copeia 2007(4): 798-807.
Peter Etnoyer
The Bulletin of Marine Science published a new paper by HRI doctoral
fellow Peter Etnoyer in November. It was one of eighteen articles
selected for the primary volume of the Proceedings of the Third
International Deep-sea Coral Symposium. Peter is a PhD student in
Dr. Thomas Shirley’s Biodiversity and Conservation Laboratory. Oceana’s Jon Warrenchuk is co-author. Jon is a former master’s
student from Tom’s lab in Alaska.
The new paper is the first to document a deep catshark nursery
in-situ. Prior to this, only a few isolated occurrences of catshark
egg cases existed on deep-corals. Catsharks are a speciose group of
small benthic sharks. Six species occur in the Gulf of Mexico. They
are popular in marine aquaria because of their size.
AT RIGHT: The catshark (Scyliorhinus retifer)
is the subject
of a paper by HRI's Peter Etnoyer
that was published in
Bulletin of Marine Science.
Peter first identified deep-corals as nursery habitat while studying
museum archives. He never expected to retrieve his own specimens
from 1,800 feet below. “This is a good example of something you don’t
plan to find when you go exploring in the deep sea.”
The paper is important because it provides a direct connection
between deep corals and fish. Peter continues to study the
relationship because he believes catsharks have few alternatives for
attachment substrate in the deep-sea. He will present new findings
on the phenomenon at the Texas Academy of Science meeting in March.
Etnoyer, P. and J. Warrenchuk. 2007. A catshark nursery in a deep
gorgonian field in the Mississippi Canyon, Gulf of Mexico. Bulletin
of Marine Science. 81(3): 553-559.