Velvetfish
Little velvetfishes or simply Velvetfishes are a subfamily, the Aploactininae, of marine ray-finned fishes classified within the family Synanceiidae of the suborder Scorpaenoidei. They are small fish that have skin with a velvet texture. They live on the sea bottom close to the shore, at depths of up to. They are found in the Indo-Pacific region.
Taxonomy
Aploactinidae was first formally recognised as a family by the American ichthyologists David Starr Jordan and Edwin Chapin Starks in 1904.The 5th edition of Fishes of the World classifies the family within the suborder Scorpaenoidei which in turn is classified within the order Scorpaeniformes. Other authorities place the Scorpaenoidei within the Perciformes. The most recent studies suggest that the velvetfishes belong to an expanded stonefish clade, the family Synanceiidae, because all of these fish have a curved sabre-like lacrimal spine that can project, using a switch-blade-like mechanism, out from underneath their eye. Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes presently recognizes this placement.The name of the family is taken from that of the type genus, Aploactis. which is a compound of "haplo" meaning "single" or "simple", and actis, meaning "ray", presumed to refer to the simple, unbranched soft rays of the fins.
Genera
The following genera are classified within the family Aploactinidae:- Acanthosphex Fowler, 1938
- Adventor Whitley, 1952
- Aploactis Temminck & Schlegel, 1843
- Aploactisoma Castelnau, 1872
- Bathyaploactis Whitley, 1933
- Cocotropus Kaup, 1858
- Erisphex Jordan & Starks 1904
- Kanekonia Tanaka, 1915
- Matsubarichthys Poss & Johnson, 1991
- Neoaploactis Eschmeyer & Allen, 1978
- Paraploactis Bleeker, 1864
- Peristrominous Whitley, 1952
- Prosoproctus Poss & Eschmeyer, 1979
- Pseudopataecus Johnson, 2004
- Ptarmus J. L. B. Smith, 1947
- Sthenopus Richardson, 1848
- Xenaploactis Poss & Eschmeyer, 1980
Characteristics