- Source: Ostraciidae
Ostraciidae or Ostraciontidae is a family of squared, bony fish belonging to the order Tetraodontiformes, closely related to the pufferfishes and filefishes. Fish in the family are known variously as boxfishes, cofferfishes, cowfishes and trunkfishes. It contains about 23 extant species in 6 extant genera.
Taxonomy
Ostraciidae was first prposed as a family in 1810 by the French polymath Constantine Samuel Rafinesque. In the past this grouping was regarded as a subfamily, the Ostraciinae, along with the subfamily Aracaninae, of a wider Ostraciidae. However, recent phylogenetic studies have concluded that the families Aracanidae and Ostraciidae are valid families but that they are part of the same clade, the suborder Ostracioidei. The 5th edition of Fishes of the World classifies this clade as the suborder Ostracioidea within the order Tetraodontiformes.
Etymology
Ostraciidae takes its name from its type genus, Ostracion, a name which means "little box" and is an allusion to the shape of the body of its type species, O. cubicus.
Description
Ostraciidae boxfishes occur in a variety of different colors, and are notable for the hexagonal or "honeycomb" patterns on their skin. They swim in a rowing manner. Their hexagonal plate-like scales are fused together into a solid, triangular or box-like carapace, from which the fins, tail, eyes and mouth protrude. Because of these heavy armoured scales, Ostraciidae are limited to slow movements, but few other fish are able to eat the adults. Ostraciid boxfish of the genus Lactophrys also secrete poisons from their skin into the surrounding water, further protecting them from predation. Although the adults are in general quite square in shape, young Ostraciidae are more rounded. The young often exhibit brighter colors than the adults. The scrawled cowfish, Acanthostracion quadricornis, can grow up to 50 centimetres (20 in) in length, but is generally smaller at higher latitudes.
= Range
=Ostraciids occur in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans, generally at middle latitudes, although the common or buffalo trunkfish (Lactophrys trigonus) which lives mainly in Florida waters may be found as far north as Cape Cod.
= Toxic defences
=The various members of this family are able to secrete cationic surfactants through their skin which can act as a chemical defense mechanism. An example of this is pahutoxin, a water-soluble, crystalline chemical toxin that is contained in mucus secreted from the skin of Ostracion lentiginosus and other members of the trunkfish family when they are under stress. Pahutoxin is a choline chloride ester of 3-acetoxypalmitic acid that behaves similarly to steroidal saponins found in echinoderms. When this toxic mucus is released from the fish, it quickly dissolves in the environment and negatively affects any fish in the surrounding area. It is possible since this toxin resembles certain detergents so closely, that adding these detergents as pollutants to seawater has potential to interfere with receptor-mediated processes in marine life.
Classification
The author Keiichi Matsuura lists the following genera and species:
= Fossil taxa
=Genus Eolactoria Tyler, 1975
Eolactoria sorbinii Tyler 1976 (Lutetian of Monte Bolca, Eocene Italy)
Genus Oligolactoria Tyler & Gregorova, 1991
Oligolactoria bubiki Tyler & Gregorova, 1991 (Rupelian of Moravia, Oligocene Czech Republic)
= Extant taxa
=There are about 25 recognized extant species in six genera:
Acanthostracion Bleeker, 1865
Lactophrys Swainson, 1839
Lactoria D. S. Jordan & Fowler, 1902
Ostracion Linnaeus, 1758
Paracanthostracion Whitley, 1933
Tetrosomus Swainson, 1839
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kudu-kudu
- Ikan kotak
- Ostracion
- Lactoria fornasini
- Ikan sapi tanduk panjang
- Tetraodontiformes
- Penginang
- Ostraciidae
- Longhorn cowfish
- Yellow boxfish
- Honeycomb cowfish
- Tetraodontiformes
- Triggerfish
- Smooth trunkfish
- Ostracion
- Spotted trunkfish
- Scrawled cowfish