By Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
From
the Latin adjective for having comedic attributes, a comic is most often one
who makes others laugh. Our ASEAN comics will most definitely elicit a laugh,
or at least a smile
Humphead Glassfish (Parambassis pulcinella) (2014-06-23) by Heok Hui TanLee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Humphead Glassfish
Parambassis pulcinella Kottelat, 2003
The Humphead Glassfish looks strange in every respect. Glassfishes get their name from the general tendency to have translucent bodies. This species was first described in 2003 from Ataran River and its river system in south-eastern Myanmar and western Thailand. It has become a popular aquarium fish and is harvested for the trade.
The hump from which it gets its common name is actually an expanded part of the bone above the eye, as the x-ray shows. It is not found outside of ASEAN. Within ASEAN, it is found only in the Ataran River system of Myanmar and Thailand.
Batfish (Malthopsis sp.) (2018-03-24) by SJADES 2018Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Longnose Seabat
Malthopsis kobayashii Tanaka, 1916
With its googly eyes, long nose, triangular body and what appears to be two pairs of ‘legs’, the Longnose Seabat is truly unique. It belongs to a group of anglerfishes that live in deep water.
Batfish (Malthopsis sp.) (2018-03-24) by SJADES 2018Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Like other anglerfishes, this group also has a modified fin ray which it can use to lure fish.
In the Longnose Seabat, this lure is not luminescent but rather secretes a fluid that scientists believe acts as the lure.
Batfish (Malthopsis sp.) (2018-03-24) by SJADES 2018Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
This species was first described from Mie Prefecture, Japan, in 1916. Outside of ASEAN, it is also found in Australia, Japan and Taiwan. Within ASEAN, it is found in Indonesia and the Philippines.
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) (2009-08-28) by Le Khac QuyetLee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey
Rhinopithecus avunculus (Dollman, 1912)
Put a globular head of white fur, a pair of grouchy eyes smeared by sky-blue eye shadow, an upturned nose where only nostrils can be seen, top it with exaggerated baby-pink lips...
... and you will get a Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey!
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) by Le Khac QuyetLee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Comedy aside, this species is faced with extinction and is today one of the world’s most threatened species! Following its discovery in 1912 in what is now Vietnam, so few sightings were made that scientists suspected it might be extinct.
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) (2009-08-28) by Le Khac QuyetLee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
It was only in 1989 that it was rediscovered. With as few as 250 individuals left, the survival of this species is truly precarious.
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey (Rhinopithecus avunculus) (2014-09-09) by Le Khac QuyetLee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
The Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey is not found outside of ASEAN. Within ASEAN, it is found only in Vietnam.
Goosefish (Lophiodes naresi) (2018-03-30) by SJADES 2018Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Goosefish
Lophiodes naresi (Günther, 1880)
With its huge mouth, small tail and oversized pectoral fins, the Goosefish does look comical. It was first described from specimens collected in deep water off the Philippines and Papua New Guinea during the HMS ‘Challenger’ expedition.
Goosefish (Lophiodes naresi) (2018-03-30) by SJADES 2018Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
Despite its appearance, the Goosefish is not to be messed with. Like other anglerfish, it has a lure to draw prey close enough to its huge mouth so that it can gobble them up.
The lure is called an “esca” and is an organ at the end of a modified dorsal fin ray (called the “illicium”). In some species, the esca is bioluminescent. The Goosefish has been found in various localities in the Western Pacific. Within ASEAN, it is known from Indonesia and the Philippines.
Is that a smile on your face? We did tell you that these creatures would amuse you. Why do we even need cat videos?
Text:
Goosefish
Monkfish
Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum
(National University of Singapore)
Humphead Perchlet
Peter K. L. Ng
(National University of Singapore)
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey
Andie Ang
(Singapore)
Images:
Goosefish
Monkfish
SJADES 2018
(Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Indonesia and National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Humphead Perchlet
Heok Hui Tan
(National University of Singapore)
Tonkin Snub-nosed Monkey
Le Khac Quyet
(Vietnam)
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