Scorpaeniformes | ||||||||
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Scorpaenidae: Broadbarred firefish, Pterois antennata
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Scientific classification | ||||||||
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Anoplopomatoidei Cottoidei Dactylopteroidei Hexagrammoidei Normanichthyiodei Platycephaloidei Scorpaenoidei See text for families |
Scorpaeniformes is an order of ray-finned fish, also called the Scleroparei or Dactylopteriformes, closely related to and sometimes included in the Perciformes.
They are known as "mail-cheeked" fishes due to their distinguishing characteristic, the suborbital stay: a backwards extension of the third infraorbital bone (part of the skull, below the eye socket) across the cheek to the preoperculum, to which it is connected in most species.
Classification
The division of Scorpaeniformes into families is not settled; accounts range from 26 families[1][2] to 35 families[3][4].
- Suborder
Anoplopomatoidei
- Anoplopomatidae (sablefish and skilfish)
- Suborder
Cottoidei
- Superfamily
Cottoidea
- Abyssocottidae (deep-water sculpins)
Agonidae (poachers)
Bathylutichthyidae
Comephoridae (Baikal oilfishes)
Cottidae (sculpins)
Cottocomephoridae (Baikal sculpins)
Ereuniidae
Hemitripteridae (sea ravens and sailfin sculpins)
Icelidae (scaled sculpins)[5]
Psychrolutidae (fatheads)
Rhamphocottidae (grunt sculpin)
- Abyssocottidae (deep-water sculpins)
- Superfamily
Cyclopteroidea
- Cyclopteridae (lumpsuckers)
Liparidae (snailfishes)
- Cyclopteridae (lumpsuckers)
- Superfamily
Cottoidea
- Suborder
Dactylopteroidei
- Dactylopteridae (flying gurnards)
- Suborder
Hexagrammoidei
- Hexagrammidae (greenlings)
- Suborder
Normanichthyiodei
- Normanichthyidae
- Suborder
Platycephaloidei
- Bembridae (deepwater flatheads)
Hoplichthyidae (ghost flatheads)
Parabembridae[6]
Platycephalidae (flatheads)
- Bembridae (deepwater flatheads)
- Suborder
Scorpaenoidei
- Apistidae[7]
Aploactinidae (velvetfishes)
Caracanthidae (orbicular velvetfishes)
Congiopodidae (horsefishes and pigfishes)
Eschmeyeridae
Gnathanacanthidae (red velvetfish)
Neosebastidae[7]
Pataecidae (Australian prowfishes)
Peristediidae[8]
Plectrogenidae[7]
Scorpaenidae (scorpionfishes and rockfishes)
Sebastidae[7]
Setarchidae[7]
Synanceiidae (stonefishes)
Tetrarogidae (waspfishes)[7]
Triglidae (searobins)
- Apistidae[7]
Notes and references
- ^ Joseph S. Nelson. Fishes of the World. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-54713-1.
- ^ Scorpaeniformes (TSN 166702). Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Accessed on 31 March 2006.
- ^ William N. Eschmeyer, Carl J. Ferraris, Mysi D. Hoang, Douglas J. Long (1998). Catalog of Fishes. California Academy of Sciences. ISBN 0-940228-47-5.
- ^ "Scorpaeniformes". FishBase. Ed. Ranier Froese and Daniel Pauly. February 2006 version. N.p.: FishBase, 2006.
- ^ Icelidae is described as a separate family by some sources [1], containing only the genus Icelus. However, this genus which is considered to be a member of Cottidae by most other sources [2]
- ^ Parabembridae is included in Bembridae in ITIS and Nelson, but split in FishBase and Eschmeyer.
- ^ a b c d e f Apistidae, Neosebastidae, Plectrogenidae, Sebastidae, and Setarchidae are included in Scorpaenidae in ITIS and Nelson, but split in FishBase and Eschmeyer.
- ^ Peristediidae is included in Triglidae in ITIS and Nelson, but split in FishBase and Eschmeyer.