Stichaeidae
{{Short description|Family of fishes}}
{{Other uses|Shanny (disambiguation){{!}}Shanny}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| image = Arctic shanny, Sticheus punctatus, in Newfoundland (7273715176).jpg
| image_caption = Arctic shanny (Sticheus punctatus) in Newfoundland
| image2 = Cebidichthys violaceus.jpg
| image2_caption = Cebidichthys violaceus
| taxon = Stichaeidae
| authority = Gill, 1864{{cite journal | author1 = Richard van der Laan | author2 = William N. Eschmeyer | author3 = Ronald Fricke | name-list-style = amp | year = 2014 | title = Family-group names of Recent fishes | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/268078514 | journal = Zootaxa | volume = 3882 | issue = 2 | pages = 001–230 | doi = 10.11646/zootaxa.3882.1.1 | pmid = 25543675 | doi-access = free }}
| subdivision_ranks = Subfamilies
| subdivision = see text
}}
Stichaeidae, the pricklebacks or shannies, are a family of marine ray-finned fishes in the suborder Zoarcoidei of the order Scorpaeniformes. Most species are found in the North Pacific Ocean with a few in the North Atlantic Ocean.
Taxonomy
Stichaeidae was first proposed as a family in 1864 by the American zoologist Theodore Gill, although he called it the Stichaeoidae. The 5th edition of Fishes of the World classifies this family within the suborder Zoarcoidei, within the order Scorpaeniformes.{{cite book |title=Fishes of the World |edition=5th |author1=J. S. Nelson |author2=T. C. Grande |author3=M. V. H. Wilson |year=2016 |pages= 478–482 |publisher=Wiley |isbn= 978-1-118-34233-6 |url=https://sites.google.com/site/fotw5th/ }} Other authorities classify this family in the infraorder Zoarcales within the suborder Cottoidei of the Perciformes because removing the Scorpaeniformes from the Perciformes renders that taxon non monophyletic.{{cite journal | author1 = Ricardo Betancur-R | author2 = Edward O. Wiley | author3 = Gloria Arratia | author4 = Arturo Acero | author5 = Nicolas Bailly | author6 = Masaki Miya | author7 = Guillaume Lecointre | author8 = Guillermo Ortí | display-authors = 3 | title =Phylogenetic classification of bony fishes | journal = BMC Evolutionary Biology | volume = 17 | issue = 162 | year = 2017 | page = 162 | doi = 10.1186/s12862-017-0958-3 | pmid = 28683774 | pmc = 5501477 | doi-access = free }}
Fishes of the World mentions six subfamilies but does not assign genera to the subfamilies while other authorities split the Cebidichthyidae, Opisthocentridae, Lumpenidae and Neozoarcidae from the Sitchaeidae as valid families. The genera which are classified within the family Eulophiidae were also previously included within the Stichaeidae.{{Cof family|family=Stichaeidae|access-date=7 August 2022}}{{Cof family|family=Lumpenidae|access-date=7 August 2022}}{{Cof family|family=Neozoarcidae|access-date=7 August 2022}}{{Cof family|family=Eulophiidae|access-date=7 August 2022}}{{Cof family|family=Opisthocentridae|access-date=8 August 2022}}{{Cof family|family=Cebidichthyidae|access-date=8 August 2022}}
=Subfamilies and genera=
The family Stichaeidae is classified into 6 subfamilies and 36 genera as follows († means extinct):
{{Columns-list|colwidth=25em|
- Subfamily Stichaeinae Gill, 1864
- Genus Ernogrammus Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Eumesogrammus Gill, 1864
- Genus Plagiogrammus T.H. Bean, 1894
- Genus Stichaeopsis Kner, 1870
- Genus Stichaeus Reinhardt, 1836
- Genus Ulvaria Jordan & Evermann, 1896
- Subfamily Opisthocentrinae Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Askoldia Pavlenko, 1910
- Genus Kasatkia Soldatov & Pavlenko, 1916
- Genus Lumpenopsis Soldatov, 1916
- Genus Opisthocentrus Kner, 1868
- Genus Pholidapus T.H. Bean & B.A. Bean, 1897
- Genus Plectobranchus Gilbert, 1890
- Subfamily Lumpeninae Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Acantholumpenus Makushok, 1958
- Genus Anisarchus Gill, 1864
- Genus Leptoclinus Gill, 1861
- Genus Lumpenella Hubbs, 1927
- Genus Lumpenus Reinhardt, 1836
- Genus Neolumpenus Miki, Kanamaru & Amaoka, 1987
- Genus Poroclinus T.H. Bean, 1890
- Genus Xenolumpenus
- Subfamily Chirolophinae Jordan & Evermann 1898
- Genus Bryozoichthys Whitley, 1931
- Genus Chirolophis Swainson, 1839
- Genus Gymnoclinus Gilbert & Burke, 1912
- Genus Soldatovia Taranetz, 1937
- Subfamily Xiphisterinae Jordan & Gilbert, 1883
- Genus Alectrias Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Alectridium Gilbert & Burke, 1912
- Genus Anoplarchus Gill, 1861
- Genus Cebidichthys Ayres, 1855
- Genus Dictyosoma Temminck & Schlegel, 1845
- Genus Esselenichthys Anderson, 2003
- Genus {{extinct}} Nvichia Nazarkin, 1998{{cite journal | author = Mikhail Valerievich Nazarkin | year = 1998 | title = New Stichaeid Fishes (Stichaeidae, Perciformes) from Miocene of Sakhalin | journal = Journal of Ichthyology | volume = 38 | issue =4 | pages = 279–291 | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/273761112}}
- Genus Phytichthys Hubbs, 1923
- Genus Pseudalectrias Lindberg, 1938
- Genus Xiphister Jordan, 1880
- Subfamily Neozoarcinae Jordan & Snyder, 1902
- Genus Neozoarces Steindachner, 1880
- Genus Zoarchias Jordan & Snyder, 1902
}}
Catalog of Fishes classifies these fishes as follows:
{{Columns-list|colwidth=25em|
- Family Stichaeidae
- Subfamily Stichaeinae Gill, 1864
- Genus Dinogunellus Herzenstein, 1890
- Genus Ernogrammus Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Plagiogrammus T.H. Bean, 1894
- Genus Stichaeopsis Kner, 1870
- Genus Stichaeus Reinhardt, 1836
- Genus Ulvaria Jordan & Evermann, 1896
- Subfamily Chirolophinae Jordan & Evermann 1898
- Genus Bryozoichthys Whitley, 1931
- Genus Chirolophis Swainson, 1839
- Genus Gymnoclinus Gilbert & Burke, 1912
- Genus Soldatovia Taranetz, 1937
- Subfamily Alectriinae Makushok, 1958
- Genus Alectrias, Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Pseudalectrias Lindberg, 1938
- Subfamily Xiphisterinae Jordan & Gilbert, 1883
- Genus Alectridium Gilbert & Burke, 1912
- Genus Anoplarchus Gill, 1861
- Genus {{extinct}} Nvichia Nazarkin, 1998
- Genus Phytichthys Hubbs, 1923
- Genus Xiphister Jordan, 1880
- Family Cebidichthyidae Gill, 1862
- Genus Cebidichthys Temminck & Schlegel, 1845
- Family Lumpenidae Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Acantholumpenus Makushok, 1958
- Genus Anisarchus Gill, 1864
- Genus Leptoclinus Gill, 1861
- Genus Lumpenella Hubbs, 1927
- Genus Lumpenus Reinhardt, 1836
- Genus Neolumpenus Miki, Kanamaru & Amaoka, 1987
- Genus Poroclinus T.H. Bean, 1890
- Genus Xenolumpenus Shinohara & Yabe, 2009
- Family Opisthocentridae Jordan & Evermann, 1898
- Genus Askoldia Pavlenko, 1910
- Genus Kasatkia Soldatov & Pavlenko, 1916
- Genus lumpenopsis Soldatov, 1916
- Genus Opisthocentrus Kner, 1868
- Genus Pholidapus T.H. Bean & B.A. Bean, 1897
- Genus Plectobranchus Gilbert, 1890
- Family Neozoarcidae Jordan & Snyder, 1902
- Genus Neozoarces Steindachner, 1880
- Genus Zoarchias Jordan & Snyder, 1902
}}
=Etymology=
The name of the family comes from that of its type genus Stichaeus, which means "set in a row", which may be an allusion to the row of black spots on the dorsal fins of the species in that genus.{{cite web | url = http://etyfish.org/perciformes15/ | title = Order Perciformes (Part 11): Suborder Cottoidea: Infraorder Zoarcales: Families: Anarhichadidae, Neozoarcidae, Eulophias, Stichaeidae, Lumpenidae, Ophistocentridae, Pholidae, Ptilichthyidae, Zaproridae, Cryptacanthodidae, Cebidichthyidae, Scytalinidae and Bathymasteridae | work = The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database | editor1= Christopher Scharpf | editor2 = Kenneth J. Lazara | name-list-style = amp |date = 4 July 2021 | access-date = 8 August 2022 | publisher = Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara}}
Characteristics
Stichaeidae are characterised by having elongate bodies which are a little compressed. They have a very long dorsal fin which typically contains a large number of sharp spines, giving rise to the common name of prickleback, and there may be some spines at the rear of the dorsal fin. The anal fin is long and has its origin closer to the head than to the tail, or halfway between the head and tail. The pectoral fins may be very small to very large and fan shaped, containing between 2 and 21 rays. The normally present small pelvic fins are located anterior to the pectoral fins, and have a single spine and between one and four rays. There are no appendages on the head, although some species have a crest, and there is a single pair of nostrils. The body is typically covered with small, overlapping scales but the head, other than the cheeks, is normally lacking scales. The sensory canals on the head are typically well developed; there are normally 6 preopercular pores and 4 mandibular pores. There may be two lateral lines which can vary from a hardly noticeable row of neuromasts to one or more canals which can have complex branching. Their teeth are small and may be incisor-like or conical in shape. In the majority of species the gill membranes are widely joined and separate from the isthmus. Most species have a siphon on the operculum. They usually have pyloric caeca but not a swim bladder. They have ribs.
Distribution and habitat
Stichaeidae is found in the North Pacific, North Atlantic, and Arctic oceans, with the majority of species in the North Pacific. They are coastal fishes which are found beneath rocks and in algae from the intertidal zone to shallow bays. the can be found at depths greater than {{cvt|250|m}} on the outer continental shelf.
References
{{Reflist}}
- {{FishBase family | family = Stichaeidae | month = January | year = 2006}}
- {{ITIS | id = 171554 | taxon = Stichaeidae | accessdate = 25 March 2006}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q1542021}}
{{Authority control}}