First record of Triacanthidae Bleeker, 1859 (Actinopterygii: Tetraodontiformes) from the Red Sea

The Tetraodontiform family Triacanthidae Bleeker, 1859 is recorded for the first time from the Red Sea. Fishing experiments em - ploying a commercial shrimp trawler off Jizan, Saudi Arabia, revealed species occurrences of short-nosed tripodfish, Triacanthus biaculeatus (Bloch, 1786) at depths ranging from about 11 to 34 m. Currently, this species has only been found in shallow sandy/ muddy habitats in the southern Red Sea. Further surveys are imperative to demonstrate the actual distribution of short-nosed tripod-fish across a wider range of environmental gradients along the Red Sea.


Materials and methods
Fishing experiments employing a commercial shrimp trawler were carried out as part of stock assessment and selectivity studies during May-August 2023 off Jizan in the southern Red Sea coast of Saudi Arabia.Species occurrences of short-nosed tripodfish (n = 19) were recorded from seven hauls at depths ranging from about 11 to 34 m (Table 1; Fig. 1).Three voucher specimens were collected as part of faunal surveys, fixed in 10% formalin and then later transferred to 70% ethanol for further analysis.Fishing experiments were conducted employing an authorized fishing vessel operating along the southern Red Sea coast of Saudi Arabia.All three specimens were already dead when collected.Triacanthus biaculeatus is currently not listed as threatened according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (Matsuura and Motomura 2015).
Species identification followed Carpenter et al. (1997), Matsuura (2001), andHeemstra et al. (2022).Genus and species classifications followed Fricke et al. (2023a); family authorship followed van der Laan et al. (2014).Morphometrics were measured to the nearest 1 mm using a fish ruler and a digital Vernier caliper to the nearest 0.1 mm.The specimens were deposited to the faunal collections of Beacon Development-King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia.A short taxonomic description is provided based on the voucher specimens from the Red Sea along with a note on their geographical distribution in the Indo-Pacific.Data on the distribution of T. biaculeatus (map was generated using SimpleMappr; Shorthouse 2010) is based on published literature and it does not represent exhaustive inventories.Abbreviated synonymies include original descriptions and key references.
Triacanthus biaculeatus (Bloch, 1786).-Carpenter et al. (1997):   Description.Body moderately elongated, strongly compressed, head profile from above eye to first dorsal-fin spine base slightly convex to straight; skin moderately thick with minute scales, upright spinules on each scale producing rough shagreen-like appearance; mouth small, terminal, snout moderately acute; five dorsal spines; anterior dorsal fin membrane black, spiny dorsal-fin membrane very dark between first and third spines, equally dark between third and fifth spines; caudal peduncle tapering distinctly, wider than deep.
Color.The coloration of the freshly collected specimens was silvery, upper half of body dusky and pale below with indistinct pale mid-lateral stripe; large dark blotch on dorsum beneath spiny dorsal fins; soft dorsal, anal and pectoral fins yellowish; caudal fin dark yellow.

Discussion
Triacanthus biaculeatus is differentiated from its congener, Triacanthus nieuhofii Bleeker, 1852 by the first dor-sal fin coloration (spiny dorsal-fin membrane very dark between first and third spines, and usually equally dark between third and fifth spines vs. very dark between first and second spines, slightly to less dark between second and third spines, and pale between third and fifth spines) and the outline of head from base of first dorsal-fin spine to above eye (slightly convex or almost a straight line vs. convex in front of spine and then straight or slightly concave over eye) (Matsuura 2015;Mohanty et al. 2018).
Triacanthus biaculeatus is widespread across the whole Indo-West Pacific (Matsuura 2001;Santini and Tyler 2002;Fricke et al. 2023a), ranging from the Persian/Arabian Gulf to South Africa (Eastern Cape) and India and Sri Lanka, and Mauritius; elsewhere to Bay of Bengal (India), Indonesia, Taiwan, Philippines, China, Korea, central Japan, Western Australia and Queensland (Australia) (Bishop 2003;Heemstra et al. 2022;Fricke et al. 2023a).Triacanthus biaculeatus is hitherto unknown from the Arabian coasts and Madagascar (Santini and Tyler 2002;Fricke et al. 2018); the presently reported study constitutes the first documented record of this species for the Red Sea from Jizan, Saudi Arabia (Fig. 3).Currently, T. biaculeatus seems restricted to shallow sandy/muddy habitats in the southern Red Sea.According to Bogorodsky et al. (2014), the increased number of new records from the southern Red Sea could be attributable to the recent expansion of fish populations from the Gulf of Aden or other parts of the northwestern Indian Ocean.Based on its wider geographic distribution in the Indo-Pacific (Matsuura 2001) and its abundance in the trawling grounds along the Persian/Arabian Gulf (Carpenter et al. 1997), it is highly likely that T. biaculeatus could have naturally expanded its distribution and a breeding population already exists regionally in the southern Red Sea.Further surveys are imperative to demonstrate the actual distribution of this species across a wide range of environmental gradients along the Red Sea.(Bloch, 1786) in the Indo-West Pacific.Yellow closed circles = previous records; red closed circle = presently reported record (the map was generated using SimpleMappr; Shorthouse 2010).