First record of Goldlined seabream Rhabdosargus sarba (Forsskål 1775), Sparidae, in the Mediterranean Sea (Syrian waters)

This paper presents the first record of Rhabdosargus sarba (Forsskål 1775) in the Mediterranean Sea and the Syrian marine waters. One specimen (163 mm TL, 66.45 g TW) was caught by trammel nets at a depth range between 50 and 60 m, from Lattakia coast, on 31 January 2021. This record represents the first sighting of this immigrant species that entered the Mediterranean Sea to Syrian waters from the Red Sea. the key to the species of Rhabdosargus is provided.

The Goldlined Seabream Rhabdosargus sarba (Forsskål 1775), is a sparid fish commonly found in subtropical inshore waters of the Indo-West Pacific including the Red Sea, East Africa, South Africa, Mozambique Channel, Seychelles, Madagascar and Mascarenes, east to Philippines, north to southern Japan, south to northern Australia. This species can presumably be found in a wider range in Oman, Iran, India and Bangladesh and has been reported from Pakistan (Bianchi 1985;Siddiqui et al. 2014).
R. sarba inhabits coastal waters, usually entering estuaries. It feeds on benthic invertebrates, mainly mollusks and aquatic macrophytes. Sexes are separate but some individuals are protandrous. (Froese and Pauly 2020).
This species has not been reported before in the Mediterranean Sea (Froese and Pauly 2020), so we present here the first occurrence of R. sarba from Syrian waters, and also from the Mediterranean Sea.

Materials and methods
One specimen of R. sarba was caught on 31 January 2021, with a surface seawater temperature of 19.7 C, it was caught during artisanal fishing operation, using trammel nets at a depth range between 50 and 60 m, from south of Lattakia city (Fig. 1).
The specimen was measured to the nearest (mm), weighted to the nearest (g) and morphometric measurements with percentages of standard length (SL). The specimen was preserved in 10% buffered formalin and deposited in the Ichthyological collection of the laboratory (Fig. 2).

Results
R. sarba specimen has a total length (TL) 163 mm, with total weight (TW) 66.45 g. Morphometric and Meristic data of the specimen is summarized in (Table 1). The specimen of this species presents the following characteristics: Body deep (depth about 2 times in standard length), compressed. Head large; upper profile steep, most strongly arched from snout to origin of dorsal fin; eye moderate to small in large specimens; mouth almost horizontal, low. At front of jaws, 4 to 6 upper, and 6 to 8 lower, enlarged, compressed teeth, becoming subconical in large adults, followed by 4 or 5 rows of molar teeth in posterior part of upper jaw and, 2 to 4 rows in lower jaw, the last molar in each jaw largest ( Fig. 3, a, b). Gill rakers short, few, 7 to 9 on lower limb of first gill arch. Dorsal fin single, with XI or XII slender spines and 13 (rarely 12) to 15 soft rays, third and fourth spines longest. Anal fin with III spines and 11 soft rays, second and third spines subequal; pectoral fins long. Pelvic fins not reaching anus. Caudal fin forked. Scales cycloid (smooth), more than 50 in lateral line; 5 ½ or 6 ½ scale rows between lateral line and fourth dorsal-fin spine; preopercle flange naked; dorsal and anal fins with a low scaly sheath; a long axillary pelvic process. Color of fresh specimens: Head and body silvery-yellowish black; body with yellow or golden longitudinal lines; eye yellow with dark area; operculum silvery; yellow or yellowish coloration of pectoral, pelvic and anal fins; edges of dorsal and caudal fins are grayish, sometimes golden shade on caudal fin just after the caudal peduncle; pectoral-fins hyaline with light yellowish shade; chin and belly silverywhite; Body and head Silvery with yellowish or gold sheen (Fig. 4).

Discussion
All measurements, counts, and colour patterns determined the morphological analyses in previous other records of this species in Western Indian Ocean (Bauchot and Smith 1984), South Africa (Smith and Smith 1986), Western central Pacific (Carpenter and Niem 2001) and Australia (Dianne 2021).
R. sarba distinguish from R. haffara that has been recorded previous in our waters, they can be confused in terms of general appearance, but R. sarba differs from R. haffara in having 12-14 dorsal-fin soft rays and 10-11 anal-fin soft rays vs. 12-13 dorsal-fin soft rays and 10 anal-fin soft rays in R. haffara (Table 2) (Smith and Smith 1986;Heemstra and Heemstra 2004;Tanaka and Iwatsuki 2013). R. sarba discernible from R. haffara in having higher counts of pored lateral-line scales and scales rows above/ below lateral line (56-64 and 6½-8½ / 12½-14½ in R. sarba vs. 57-59 and 5½-6½ / 12½-13½ in R. haffara, respectively) ( Table 2). In addition, R. sarba has a silvery body and head with yellowish or gold sheen, while R. haffara possesses a silvery body and head (Table 2).
R. sarba has not already been mentioned in the Mediterranean Sea, so our research represents the first record in the Mediterranean Sea and Syrian waters. It is probably an immigrant species from the Red Sea into Levantine Basin. The observed specimen was found mixing

Conclusion
A specimen of R. sarba was captured from Syrian waters, mixed with populations of Diplodus sargus, Siganus rivulatus and Siganus luridus. The record in the Syrian waters represents the first report of this species in the Mediterranean Sea. We suppose that is an immigrant species from the Red Sea. The single specimen does not necessarily indicate a settled population at this area.