Remoras are fish of the family Echeneidae, characterized by having the first dorsal fin modified in a laminated cephalic disc, comprising eight species distributed in three genera with tropical and subtropical distribution (Nelson et al., 2016). Remoras species are commensals and cleaners of parasites of large fish and marine mammals (Bertoncini, 2007).
Seven species of remoras are known for the Mexican Pacific, but Echeneis naucatres (Linnaeus, 1758) and Remora remora (Linnaeus, 1758) are the most abundant species. The spearfish remora Remora brachyptera (Lowe, 1839) is considered potentially circumtropical distribution, however, in the southern Mexican Pacific there is no confirmed records. The CONABIO database (CONABIO, 2016) only shows records around the Baja California peninsula, Sinaloa and Nayarit. There’s no evidence of its presence in Gulf of Tehuantepec after a review of Fishes Collections database (CICIMAR-IPN, 2011; AMNH, 2022) and scientific literature (Miller & Lea, 1972; Bastida-Zavala et al., 2013; Del Moral-Flores et al., 2016).
In 2009, R. brachyptera was included in the IUCN red list (Collette, 2010), even though its status is described as least concern, the inclusion is because some of its hosts belong to the so-called billfish, which are of great importance in sportfishing worldwide, are highly migratory species and some of them are classified as near threatened (Collette et al., 2011a) and even vulnerable (Collette et al., 2011b), that is to say that remoras could share vulnerabilities with their hosts, therefore collecting precise data on their biology is important.
This scientific note describes the first confirmed record of a spearfish remora, Remora brachyptera in the Gulf of Tehuantepec, Mexico.
A specimen of R. brachyptera (Fig. 1) was collected in the Gulf of Tehuantepec, inside gill cavity of a striped marlin Kajikia audax (Philippi, 1887) (eye-fork length 210 cm), on May 11, 2013, during sportfishing activities in Huatulco Bay, Oaxaca, with caught zone in the coastal strip of 15 nautical miles, between 15°41’17” N to 15°47’49” N. The counts and measurements were based on the proposal of Myoung et al. (2015), by using a 300 mm (± 0.02mm) caliper. The individual was required by the angler who caught it. Species was confirmed using the criteria of Paulin & Habib (1982), Schneider (1995) and Collette (2002).
The examined specimen of R. brachyptera presented 183.62 mm standard length (SL). Description: 17 pairs of laminae in the cephalic disc, which does not reach the posterior edge of the pectoral fin, cephalic disk length 32.6% of SL. Spineless dorsal and anal fins: dorsal: 27; anal: 25; pelvic: I,5; pectoral: 25. First gill arch with 1+10 gill rakers (Table 1). Robust body and height 13.7% of SL. The origin of the dorsal fin is slightly ahead of the origin of the anal fin, whose posterior edge does not reach the origin of the caudal fin. Origin of the pelvic fin in the midline of the rounded pectoral fin. Truncated caudal fin. Rounded and prognathic lower jaw, pointed upper jaw, both with large numbers of caniniform teeth. The posterior edge of the jaw does not reach the edge of the eye. Small eye, 3.2% of the SL. Two pairs of nasal openings, the front ones smaller than the posterior ones. The lateral line begins at the upper posterior edge of the gill opening and ends at the base of the caudal fin. The coloration in fresh was uniformly gray of pale whitish tone, tail with blackish margin.
Morphological characters | Present study | Lowe (1839) | Paulin & Habib (1982) | Hatooka & Kai (2013) | Myoung et al. (2015) | Bañón et al. (2017) |
No. Specimens | 1 | 15 | 2 | 1 | ||
Total length (TL) | 210.62 | 141 | ||||
Standard length (SL) | 182.62 | 120-244 | 180.2-209 | 121 | ||
COUNTS | ||||||
Pairs of laminae in cephalic disc | 17 | 16-17 | 16 | 16 | ||
Dorsal rays | 27 | 28 | 26-30 | 27-37 | 30 | 28 |
Anal rays | 25 | 24 | 22-34 | 25-27 | 23 | |
Pectoral rays | 25 | 26 | 23-28 | 25 | 22 | |
Pelvic rays | I, 5 | I,5 | I, 5 | I, 5 | ||
Gill rakers on first gill arch | 1+11 | 1-3+9-12 | 1+10-11 | 1+11 | ||
MEASURES % OF SL | ||||||
Head length | 27.6 | 26.5 (25.4-27.7) | 26.4-27.7 | 24.8 | ||
Eye diameter | 3.2 | 3.5 (3.2-4.1) | 3.4-4.2 | 4.1 | ||
Snout length | 12.9 | 13-13.5 | 10.7 | |||
Head width | 18.1 | 16 (14.3-18) | 15.4-16.2 | |||
Cephalic disk length | 32.6 | 31.3(29.4-33.1) | 31.1 | 28.9 | ||
Cephalic disk width | 16.9 | 16.9 (15.2-19.2) | 14.9 | 12.4 | ||
Pre-dorsal length | 58.5 | 56.5 (52.4-60.8) | 56.1-62.8 | 56.2 | ||
Pre-anal length | 62.1 | |||||
Maximum height | 13.7 | 15.3 (13.9-17.1) | 15.7-17.4 | |||
Length of the dorsal fin | 37.0 | 37.6 (32.5-42.4) | 38.4-39.7 | 35.5 | ||
Length of the anal fin | 32.62 | 31.5-33.4 | 31.4 | |||
Length of the pectoral fin | 14.0 | 11.6-14.2 | ||||
Pelvic fin length | 12.1 | 9.8-12.6 | 12.4 | |||
Caudal fin length | 19.0 | 19.2-20.2 | ||||
Height of the caudal peduncle | 6.5 | 6.2 (4.5-7.1) | 5.9-6.8 |
In addition to R. brachiptera, in the Gulf of Tehuantepec, there have been recorded: R. australis, and R. remora. They have differences in the number of lamellae on cephalic disc, and gill rakers on the first arch (Collette, 2002), between others. Details of some differences are showed in Table 2
Morphological characters | R. brachyptera | R. australis | R. remora |
Laminae on cephalic disc | 14-17 | 24-28 | 16-20 |
Gill rakers | <21 | 17-20 | 29-34 |
Dorsal Rays | 27-34 | 25-27 | 22-26 |
Cephalic disk as % standard length | 28-40% | 50% | |
Caudal fin type | Emarginated | Forked | Forked |
Dorsal fin Origin | Front to de anal fin origin | Just to origin of anal fin | Behind to the anal fin origin |
Remora brachyptera occurs worldwide in tropical to warm temperate seas. In the Eastern Pacific this species has been recorded from California to Chile, however in Mexican coast, only has been recorded from Baja California peninsula to Nayarit, and with this note has report in Gulf of Tehuantepec. In the western Atlantic, it occurs from Nova Scotia to Uruguay. This species lives inside gill cavity of pelagic fishes, between them: Xiphias gladius, Mola sp., Masturus lanceolatus, Prionace glauca, and another pelagic organisms as Caretta caretta and occasionally, free swimming (McEachran & Fechhelm, 2005; Prandi, 2015).
Even when big sportfish as billfish are common in sport catches, the species associated with them are not taken into account, that is a way that the remoras are not recorded, because large-sized remoras separates from the host when is caught, or remoras of small size are hidden within the gill or oropharyngeal cavity and go unnoticed. In sportfishing, the fish are revised by tournament judges to remove some objects (i.e. remoras, cans, bait) that can increase the weight of billfish. In this case, the first author (as tournament judge) removed the remora to weigh the striped marlin. Normally, the remora will be rule-out as trash, liberated in the bay or, as in this case, the angler take it as an accessorial trophy.
The presence of R. brachyptera in the Gulf of Tehuantepec is confirmed in this note. This information increases the ichthyological knowledge of regional diversity, but is necessary to encourage the research about ecology of R. brachyptera, in order to know more details about it, because this species is included in the IUCN red list (Collette, 2010).