First records of two rays and three bony fishes for the Galapagos Islands

Author:

Mossbrucker Magdalena E.ORCID,Acuña-Marrero David,Cundy Megan E.,Fierro-Arcos DenisseORCID,Suárez-Moncada Jenifer M.,Rastoin-Laplaine Etienne,Salinas-de-León PelayoORCID

Abstract

Abstract The Galapagos Islands lie within the oceanic ecoregion of the Tropical Eastern Pacific, which has a unique fish assemblage composition due to the influence of several ocean currents and El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events. In the El Niño phase of these events, water temperature changes facilitate the movement of fish species between oceanic ecoregions, as well as across the Eastern Pacific Barrier. Here, we present five new fish records for the Galapagos Marine Reserve based on underwater imagery. These include two rays (Mobula thurstoni and Myliobatis longirostris) and three bony fishes (Lobotes pacifica, Lutjanus colorado and Sphyraena stellata). Of these, the first species is proposed as potentially resident to the Galapagos, and the latter four as vagrant species in the Galapagos until further sightings can conclusively determine their status. The effects of ENSO, the use of underwater video technology, and the importance of up-to-date and accurate species listings to understand the impact of the climate crisis are discussed.

Funder

Save Our Seas Foundation

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Aquatic Science

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