FIRST REPORTS OF SMALLTOOTH SAND TIGER SHARKS , ODONTASPIS FEROX ( ELASMO-BRANCHII : LAMNIFORMES : ODONTASPIDIDAE ) , OFF THE CONTINENTAL ECUADOR

The fi rst report of two smalltooth sand tiger sharks, Odontaspis ferox (Risso, 1810), off the continental Ecuador is presented herewith. The specimens were captured by the Ecuadorian fi shing fl eet and landed in Manta and Puerto López Canton, Ecuador. The juvenile female specimen was registered in November 2008 and the adult male in July 2009. Both of the specimens recorded extend the geographic range of distribution of O. ferox in the tropical eastern Pacifi c Ocean.

The industrial and artisanal fi sheries are important economic activities in Ecuador.The city of Manta is the fi shing port where the largest volumes of sharks are landed (almost 40 000 sharks each year).As many as 30 shark species are caught off the country's coast.Species of the family Alopiidae have the highest catch volumes followed by Carcharhinidae, Sphyrnidae, Triakidae, Squatinidae, and Lamnidae (Estupiñán-Montaño, personal observation).
The family Odontaspididae is distributed in warm temperate and tropical seas with members of this family generally living near the coast and in deep waters.Their wide geographical distribution includes all oceans, coastal waters, and surface and deep waters (down to 1600 m).This family includes two genera: Carcharias and Odontaspis and four species: the sand tiger shark, Carcharias taurus Rafi nesque, 1810; the Indian sand tiger shark, Carcharias tricuspidatus Day, 1878; the smalltooth sand tiger shark, Odontaspis ferox (Risso, 1810); and the bigeye sand tiger shark, Odontaspis noronhai (Maul, 1955).All known species of this family are large (>360 cm total length) (Compagno 1984).In the central eastern Pacifi c only one species has been identifi ed: Odontaspis ferox, which is distributed from southern California to the Gulf of California (Compagno 1984, Fischer et al. 1995).The smalltooth sand tiger sharks, O. ferox, have also been reported off the coast of Cocos Island, Costa Rica, Malpelo Island, Colombia (Robertson and Allen 2002), the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador (Acuña-Marrero et al. 2013, Ritter andCompagno 2013), and Isla San Ambrosio, Chile (Long et al. 2014).
The presently described fi ndings constitute the fi rst fi shing record of Odontaspis ferox off the continental Ecuador.Consequently, the presently reported fi ndings increase the biodiversity of cartilaginous fi sh off continental Ecuador and expand the range of distribution of the smalltooth sand tiger shark, O. ferox, in Ecuadorian waters and the tropical eastern Pacifi c Ocean.
The fi rst specimen was reported in the artisanal fi shing port of Tarqui Beach in Manta, Ecuador, in 2008 and the second individual was registered in the port of Puerto López Canton, Ecuador, in 2009.Each individual was measured to the nearest cm and sexed (Table 1).Photographs of the bodies were taken to show more details of the shark's morphological characteristics.Identifi cation of both specimens was aided by the following publications: Compagno (1984), Rubio (1988), Fischer et al. (1995), Chirichigno (1998), Robertson and Allen (2015), and Nelson (2006).
Two specimens of Odontaspis ferox were registered.The fi rst individual was a juvenile female measuring 121 cm of total length (TL), recorded on 27 November 2008, was landed in the port of Manta, Ecuador (Fig. 1).However, no information is available regarding the catch area or capture method (Fig. 2, Table 1).The second specimen of O. ferox was an adult male, 262 cm TL, captured by fi shermen on 23 July 2009 (Fig. 3, Table 1).The specimen was captured at a depth of ~14.6 m, at ~1460 m by using the driftnet method with a mesh size of 12.7 cm.The net was set at night and collected the next morning.The total fi shing time was approximately 12 h.Both records were made in the province of Manabí, Ecuador.Odontaspis ferox has been reported off the coast of the Hawaiian Islands, southern California and the Gulf of California (Compagno 1984, Fischer et al. 1995)  Odontaspis ferox is characterized by its elongated, bulbous snout and large eyes (Fischer et al. 1995).Their dentition includes two or three pairs of lateral cusps, two pairs of symphysial teeth, and three to four intermediate teeth (Compagno 1984, Fischer et al. 1995).All of these characteristics were observed in specimens recorded in Manta and Puerto López Canton, Ecuador (Figs. 2 and  3).Both specimens had two intermediate teeth and four symphysial teeth, each with two pairs of lateral cusps (Fig. 3) and both had large eyes.
Also characteristic of Odontaspis ferox are its large dorsal fi ns.The fi rst dorsal fi n is larger than the second.The origin of the second dorsal fi n is located near the end of the base of the pelvic fi ns (Compagno 1984) with a very evident slot at the caudal peduncle (Fischer et al. 1995).
These distinctive characteristics were identifi ed in the two specimens landed in Manta and Puerto López Canton (Fig. 3).The dorsal fi n was situated behind the pectoral fi ns and the second dorsal fi n was smaller than the fi rst.The origin of the second dorsal fi n was above the free end of the pelvic fi ns and near the end of their bases (Fig. 3).The anal fi n was smaller in size than the second dorsal fi n (Fig. 3).These characteristics confi rm that the specimens registered in Manta and Puerto López Canton corresponds to O. ferox, the species described by Risso (1810).
Odontaspis ferox has been reported off the coasts of oceanic islands, typically volcanic, suggesting the preferences of O. ferox for oceanic habitats where it can be found at great depths and at times near the surface (Compagno 1984).Surface behaviour in O. ferox has been observed occasionally in Malpelo Island during recreational and scientifi c diving at a depth range of 15-30 m (Estupiñán-Montaño, personal observation).This behaviour may have led to the capture of the largest specimen (262 cm TL, this study) that was captured by using a driftnet at a depth of 10-15 m.The presence of a small O. ferox specimen (121 cm TL, this study) along with the sighting of two juvenile O. ferox (< 100 cm LT) in Buenaventura port (Colombia) (Estupiñán-Montaño, unpublished data), suggest that individuals that reside these oceanic islands (e.g., Malpelo and Galápagos Islands) may use these locations as nursery

Table 1
Morphometric characteristics of two specimens of the smalltooth sand tiger shark, Odontaspis ferox, caught off the coast of Ecuador (Measured in cm) Specimen 1 was captured on 27 November 2008 and Specimen 2on 23 July 2009.