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Indonesian coelacanth

The Indonesian coelacanth (Latimeria menadoensis, Indonesian: raja laut), also called Sulawesi coelacanth,[1][3] is one of two living species of coelacanth, identifiable by its brown color. It is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN,[1] while the other species, L. chalumnae (West Indian Ocean coelacanth) is listed as critically endangered.[4] Separate populations of the Indonesian coelacanth are found in the waters of north Sulawesi as well as Papua and West Papua.

Indonesian coelacanth
A preserved Latimeria menadoensis, Tokyo Sea Life Park, Japan
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Sarcopterygii
Class: Actinistia
Order: Coelacanthiformes
Family: Latimeriidae
Genus: Latimeria
Species:
L. menadoensis
Binomial name
Latimeria menadoensis
Pouyaud, Wirjoatmodjo, Rachmatika, Tjakrawidjaja, Hadiaty & Hadie, 1999
L. menadoensis range in violet

Discovery edit

 
Latimeria menadoensis featured in Indonesian stamp

On September 18, 1997, Arnaz and Mark Erdmann, traveling in Indonesia on their honeymoon, saw a strange fish in a market at Manado Tua, on the island of Sulawesi.[5] Mark Erdmann thought it was a gombessa (Comoro coelacanth), although it was brown, not blue. Erdmann took only a few photographs of the fish before it was sold. After confirming that the discovery was unique, Erdmann returned to Sulawesi in November 1997, interviewing fishermen to look for further examples.[6][7] In July 1998, a fisherman Om Lameh Sonatham caught a second Indonesian specimen, 1.2 m in length and weighing 29 kg on July 30, 1998, and handed the fish to Erdmann.[8] The fish was barely alive, but it lived for six hours, allowing Erdmann to photographically document its coloration, fin movements and general behavior. The specimen was preserved and donated to the Bogor Zoological Museum, part of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences.[5] Erdmann's discovery was announced in Nature in September 1998.[9]

The fish collected by Erdmann was described in a 1999 issue of Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des sciences Paris by Pouyaud et al. It was given the scientific name Latimeria menadoensis (named after Manado where the specimen was found).[10] The description and its naming were published without the involvement or knowledge of Erdmann, who had been independently conducting research on the specimen at the time.[11] In response to Erdmann's complaints, Pouyaud and two other scientists asserted in a submission to Nature that they had been aware of the new species since 1995, predating the 1997 discovery. However the supplied photographic evidence of the purported earlier specimen, supposedly collected off southwest Java, was recognised as a crude forgery by the editorial team and the claim was never published.[12][13]

The fish is legally protected through the Minister of Forestry Regulation No. 7/1999.[14] However, it continued to be caught by local fishermen; on November 5, 2014, a fisherman found a specimen in his net, the seventh Indonesian coelacanth found in Indonesian waters since 1998.[15] Eight have been caught as of 2018.[16]

Description edit

Superficially, the Indonesian coelacanth, known locally as raja laut ("king of the sea"), appears to be the same as those found in the Comoros except that the background coloration of the skin is brownish-gray rather than bluish. It has the same white mottling pattern as the Comorian coelacanth, but with flecks over the dorsal surface of its body and fins that appear golden due to the reflection of light.[9] It may grow to 1.4 meters long.[17][16]

DNA analysis has shown that the specimen obtained by Erdmann differed genetically from the Comorian population.[18][19] In 2005, a molecular study estimated the divergence time between the Indonesian and Comorian coelacanth species to be 30–40 mya. The two species show a 4.28% overall difference in their nucleotides.[20]

An analysis of a specimen recovered from Waigeo, West Papua in eastern Indonesia indicates that there may be another lineage of the Indonesian coelacanth, and the two lineages may have diverged 13 million years ago. Whether this new lineage represents a subspecies or a new species has yet to be determined.[21]

Habitat edit

Teams of researchers using submersibles have recorded live sightings of the fish in the waters of Manado Tua and the Talise islands off north Sulawesi as well as in the waters of Biak in Papua.[22][23][16] These areas share similar steep rocky topography full of caves, which are the habitat of the fish. These coelacanths live in deep waters of around 150 metres or more, at a temperature between 14 and 18 degrees Celsius.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Erdmann, M. (2008). "Latimeria menadoensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008: e.T135484A4129545. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T135484A4129545.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2023). "Latimeria menadoensis" in FishBase. February 2023 version.
  4. ^ Musick, J. A. (2000). "Latimeria chalumnae". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2000: e.T11375A3274618. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2000.RLTS.T11375A3274618.en.
  5. ^ a b Jewett, Susan L. (November 11, 1998). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on September 16, 2005. Retrieved 2007-06-19.
  6. ^ Gee, Henry (1 October 1998). "Coelacanth discovery in Indonesia". Nature. doi:10.1038/news981001-1.
  7. ^ "The Discovery". University of California Museum of Paleontology.
  8. ^ Nelson, Joseph S. (2006). Fishes of the World. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-25031-7
  9. ^ a b Erdmann, Mark V.; Caldwell, Roy L.; Moosa, M. Kasim (24 September 1998). "Indonesian 'king of the sea' discovered". Nature. 395 (6700): 335. Bibcode:1998Natur.395..335E. doi:10.1038/26376. S2CID 204997216.
  10. ^ Pouyaud, L.; S. Wirjoatmodjo; I. Rachmatika; A. Tjakrawidjaja; R. Hadiaty & W. Hadie (1999). "Une nouvelle espèce de coelacanthe: preuves génétiques et morphologiques". Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série III. 322 (4): 261–267. Bibcode:1999CRASG.322..261P. doi:10.1016/S0764-4469(99)80061-4. PMID 10216801.
  11. ^ Holden, C. (1999). "Dispute Over a Legendary Fish". Science. 284 (5411): 22–23. doi:10.1126/science.284.5411.22b. PMID 10215525. S2CID 5441807.
  12. ^ McCabe, H. & J. Wright (2000). "Tangled tale of a lost, stolen and disputed coelacanth". Nature. 406 (6792): 114. doi:10.1038/35018247. PMID 10910324.
  13. ^ McCabe, H. (2000). "Recriminations and confusion over 'fake' coelacanth photo". Nature. 406 (6794): 343. Bibcode:2000Natur.406..225M. doi:10.1038/35018716. PMID 10917500.
  14. ^ F. D. Hukom; Masamitsu Iwata; Augy Syahailatua; Teguh Peristiwady; Kawilarang W.A. Masengi; Dirhamsyah; Yoshitaka Abe. "History, Conservation and Research Program of Indonesian Coelacanth". 10th International Aquarium Congress Fukushima 2018 (PDF). pp. 122–126.
  15. ^ Gabriel Wahyu Titiyoga (November 15, 2014). "Another Pre-Historical Fish Caught in Sulawesi Water".
  16. ^ a b c Masamitsu Iwata; Yoshitaka Yabumoto; Toshiro Saruwatari; Shinya Yamauchi; Kenichi Fujii; Rintaro Ishii; Toshiaki Mori; Frensly D. Hukom; Dirhamsyah; Teguh Peristiwady; Augy Syahailatua; Kawilarang W. A. Masengi; Ixchel F. Mandagi; Fransisco Pangalila; Yoshitaka Abe (2019). "Field surveys on the Indonesian coelacanth, Latimeria menadoensis using remotely operated vehicles from 2005 to 2015". Bull. Kitakyushu Mus. Nat. Hist. Hum. Hist., Ser. A. 17: 49–56. doi:10.34522/kmnh.17.0_49.
  17. ^ H. Fricke; K. Hissmann; J. Schauer; M. Erdmann; M. K. Moosa; R. Plante (2000). "Biogeography of the Indonesian coelacanths". Nature. 403 (6765): 38. doi:10.1038/47400. PMID 10638741. S2CID 4387312.
  18. ^ Erdmann, Mark V. (April 1999). "An Account of the First Living Coelacanth known to Scientists from Indonesian Waters". Environmental Biology of Fishes. 54 (#4): 439–443. doi:10.1023/A:1007584227315. S2CID 46211870. 0378-1909 (Print) 1573-5133 (Online).
  19. ^ Holder, Mark T.; Mark V. Erdmann; Thomas P. Wilcox; Roy L. Caldwell & David M. Hillis (1999). "Two living species of coelacanths?". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 96 (22): 12616–12620. Bibcode:1999PNAS...9612616H. doi:10.1073/pnas.96.22.12616. PMC 23015. PMID 10535971.
  20. ^ Inoue J. G.; M. Miya; B. Venkatesh; M. Nishida (2005). "The mitochondrial genome of Indonesian coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis (Sarcopterygii: Coelacanthiformes) and divergence time estimation between the two coelacanths". Gene. 349: 227–235. doi:10.1016/j.gene.2005.01.008. PMID 15777665.
  21. ^ Kadarusman; Hagi Yulia Sugeha; Laurent Pouyaud; Régis Hocdé; Intanurfemi B. Hismayasari; Endang Gunaisah; Santoso B. Widiarto; Gulam Arafat; Ferliana Widyasari; David Mouillot; Emmanuel Paradis (13 January 2020). "A thirteen-million-year divergence between two lineages of Indonesian coelacanths". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 192. Bibcode:2020NatSR..10..192K. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-57042-1. PMC 6957673. PMID 31932637.
  22. ^ a b Augy Syaihailatua (March 30, 2015). "Hunting for living fossils in Indonesian waters". The Conversation.
  23. ^ Rik Nulens; Lucy Scott; Marc Herbin (22 September 2011). (PDF). Smithiana. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 August 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2017.

External links edit

  • Indonesian coelacanth on YouTube
  •   Data related to Latimeria menadoensis at Wikispecies
  •   Media related to Latimeria menadoensis at Wikimedia Commons

indonesian, coelacanth, latimeria, menadoensis, indonesian, raja, laut, also, called, sulawesi, coelacanth, living, species, coelacanth, identifiable, brown, color, listed, vulnerable, iucn, while, other, species, chalumnae, west, indian, ocean, coelacanth, li. The Indonesian coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis Indonesian raja laut also called Sulawesi coelacanth 1 3 is one of two living species of coelacanth identifiable by its brown color It is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN 1 while the other species L chalumnae West Indian Ocean coelacanth is listed as critically endangered 4 Separate populations of the Indonesian coelacanth are found in the waters of north Sulawesi as well as Papua and West Papua Indonesian coelacanthA preserved Latimeria menadoensis Tokyo Sea Life Park JapanConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade SarcopterygiiClass ActinistiaOrder CoelacanthiformesFamily LatimeriidaeGenus LatimeriaSpecies L menadoensisBinomial nameLatimeria menadoensisPouyaud Wirjoatmodjo Rachmatika Tjakrawidjaja Hadiaty amp Hadie 1999L menadoensis range in violet Contents 1 Discovery 2 Description 3 Habitat 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDiscovery edit nbsp Latimeria menadoensis featured in Indonesian stampOn September 18 1997 Arnaz and Mark Erdmann traveling in Indonesia on their honeymoon saw a strange fish in a market at Manado Tua on the island of Sulawesi 5 Mark Erdmann thought it was a gombessa Comoro coelacanth although it was brown not blue Erdmann took only a few photographs of the fish before it was sold After confirming that the discovery was unique Erdmann returned to Sulawesi in November 1997 interviewing fishermen to look for further examples 6 7 In July 1998 a fisherman Om Lameh Sonatham caught a second Indonesian specimen 1 2 m in length and weighing 29 kg on July 30 1998 and handed the fish to Erdmann 8 The fish was barely alive but it lived for six hours allowing Erdmann to photographically document its coloration fin movements and general behavior The specimen was preserved and donated to the Bogor Zoological Museum part of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences 5 Erdmann s discovery was announced in Nature in September 1998 9 The fish collected by Erdmann was described in a 1999 issue of Comptes Rendus de l Academie des sciences Paris by Pouyaud et al It was given the scientific name Latimeria menadoensis named after Manado where the specimen was found 10 The description and its naming were published without the involvement or knowledge of Erdmann who had been independently conducting research on the specimen at the time 11 In response to Erdmann s complaints Pouyaud and two other scientists asserted in a submission to Nature that they had been aware of the new species since 1995 predating the 1997 discovery However the supplied photographic evidence of the purported earlier specimen supposedly collected off southwest Java was recognised as a crude forgery by the editorial team and the claim was never published 12 13 The fish is legally protected through the Minister of Forestry Regulation No 7 1999 14 However it continued to be caught by local fishermen on November 5 2014 a fisherman found a specimen in his net the seventh Indonesian coelacanth found in Indonesian waters since 1998 15 Eight have been caught as of 2018 16 Description editSuperficially the Indonesian coelacanth known locally as raja laut king of the sea appears to be the same as those found in the Comoros except that the background coloration of the skin is brownish gray rather than bluish It has the same white mottling pattern as the Comorian coelacanth but with flecks over the dorsal surface of its body and fins that appear golden due to the reflection of light 9 It may grow to 1 4 meters long 17 16 DNA analysis has shown that the specimen obtained by Erdmann differed genetically from the Comorian population 18 19 In 2005 a molecular study estimated the divergence time between the Indonesian and Comorian coelacanth species to be 30 40 mya The two species show a 4 28 overall difference in their nucleotides 20 An analysis of a specimen recovered from Waigeo West Papua in eastern Indonesia indicates that there may be another lineage of the Indonesian coelacanth and the two lineages may have diverged 13 million years ago Whether this new lineage represents a subspecies or a new species has yet to be determined 21 Habitat editTeams of researchers using submersibles have recorded live sightings of the fish in the waters of Manado Tua and the Talise islands off north Sulawesi as well as in the waters of Biak in Papua 22 23 16 These areas share similar steep rocky topography full of caves which are the habitat of the fish These coelacanths live in deep waters of around 150 metres or more at a temperature between 14 and 18 degrees Celsius 22 See also editWest Indian Ocean coelacanth Latimeria chalumnae References edit a b c Erdmann M 2008 Latimeria menadoensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008 e T135484A4129545 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2008 RLTS T135484A4129545 en Retrieved 20 November 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2023 Latimeria menadoensis in FishBase February 2023 version Musick J A 2000 Latimeria chalumnae IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2000 e T11375A3274618 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2000 RLTS T11375A3274618 en a b Jewett Susan L November 11 1998 On the Trail of the Coelacanth a Living Fossil The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 16 2005 Retrieved 2007 06 19 Gee Henry 1 October 1998 Coelacanth discovery in Indonesia Nature doi 10 1038 news981001 1 The Discovery University of California Museum of Paleontology Nelson Joseph S 2006 Fishes of the World John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 0 471 25031 7 a b Erdmann Mark V Caldwell Roy L Moosa M Kasim 24 September 1998 Indonesian king of the sea discovered Nature 395 6700 335 Bibcode 1998Natur 395 335E doi 10 1038 26376 S2CID 204997216 Pouyaud L S Wirjoatmodjo I Rachmatika A Tjakrawidjaja R Hadiaty amp W Hadie 1999 Une nouvelle espece de coelacanthe preuves genetiques et morphologiques Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie III 322 4 261 267 Bibcode 1999CRASG 322 261P doi 10 1016 S0764 4469 99 80061 4 PMID 10216801 Holden C 1999 Dispute Over a Legendary Fish Science 284 5411 22 23 doi 10 1126 science 284 5411 22b PMID 10215525 S2CID 5441807 McCabe H amp J Wright 2000 Tangled tale of a lost stolen and disputed coelacanth Nature 406 6792 114 doi 10 1038 35018247 PMID 10910324 McCabe H 2000 Recriminations and confusion over fake coelacanth photo Nature 406 6794 343 Bibcode 2000Natur 406 225M doi 10 1038 35018716 PMID 10917500 F D Hukom Masamitsu Iwata Augy Syahailatua Teguh Peristiwady Kawilarang W A Masengi Dirhamsyah Yoshitaka Abe History Conservation and Research Program of Indonesian Coelacanth 10th International Aquarium Congress Fukushima 2018 PDF pp 122 126 Gabriel Wahyu Titiyoga November 15 2014 Another Pre Historical Fish Caught in Sulawesi Water a b c Masamitsu Iwata Yoshitaka Yabumoto Toshiro Saruwatari Shinya Yamauchi Kenichi Fujii Rintaro Ishii Toshiaki Mori Frensly D Hukom Dirhamsyah Teguh Peristiwady Augy Syahailatua Kawilarang W A Masengi Ixchel F Mandagi Fransisco Pangalila Yoshitaka Abe 2019 Field surveys on the Indonesian coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis using remotely operated vehicles from 2005 to 2015 Bull Kitakyushu Mus Nat Hist Hum Hist Ser A 17 49 56 doi 10 34522 kmnh 17 0 49 H Fricke K Hissmann J Schauer M Erdmann M K Moosa R Plante 2000 Biogeography of the Indonesian coelacanths Nature 403 6765 38 doi 10 1038 47400 PMID 10638741 S2CID 4387312 Erdmann Mark V April 1999 An Account of the First Living Coelacanth known to Scientists from Indonesian Waters Environmental Biology of Fishes 54 4 439 443 doi 10 1023 A 1007584227315 S2CID 46211870 0378 1909 Print 1573 5133 Online Holder Mark T Mark V Erdmann Thomas P Wilcox Roy L Caldwell amp David M Hillis 1999 Two living species of coelacanths Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 96 22 12616 12620 Bibcode 1999PNAS 9612616H doi 10 1073 pnas 96 22 12616 PMC 23015 PMID 10535971 Inoue J G M Miya B Venkatesh M Nishida 2005 The mitochondrial genome of Indonesian coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis Sarcopterygii Coelacanthiformes and divergence time estimation between the two coelacanths Gene 349 227 235 doi 10 1016 j gene 2005 01 008 PMID 15777665 Kadarusman Hagi Yulia Sugeha Laurent Pouyaud Regis Hocde Intanurfemi B Hismayasari Endang Gunaisah Santoso B Widiarto Gulam Arafat Ferliana Widyasari David Mouillot Emmanuel Paradis 13 January 2020 A thirteen million year divergence between two lineages of Indonesian coelacanths Scientific Reports 10 1 192 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 192K doi 10 1038 s41598 019 57042 1 PMC 6957673 PMID 31932637 a b Augy Syaihailatua March 30 2015 Hunting for living fossils in Indonesian waters The Conversation Rik Nulens Lucy Scott Marc Herbin 22 September 2011 An updated inventory of all known specimens of the coelacanth Latimeria spp PDF Smithiana Archived from the original PDF on 18 August 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2017 External links editIndonesian coelacanth on YouTube nbsp Data related to Latimeria menadoensis at Wikispecies nbsp Media related to Latimeria menadoensis at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indonesian coelacanth amp oldid 1178100242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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