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Desmopuntius endecanalis (ROBERTS, 1989)

July 2nd, 2012 — 11:49am

Probably a micropredator feeding on small insects, worms, crustaceans and other zooplankton in nature. In the aquarium it will accept dried foods of a suitable size but should not be fed these exclusively. Daily meals of small live and frozen fare such as Daphnia, Artemia, and suchlike will result in the best colouration and encourage the fish to come into breeding condition.

It’s a schooling species by natur…

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Desmopuntius hexazona (WEBER & DE BEAUFORT, 1912)

'Pentazona' Barb

June 28th, 2012 — 1:57pm

Native to parts of southern Borneo, eastern Sumatra, Singapore, and the Malay Peninsula. In Singapore it’s considered highly-endangered and is now restricted to the Central Catchment nature reserve.

Type locality is ‘Tuluk and Gunung Sahilan, Sumatra, Indonesia’ which appears to correspond to localities within the Kampar River drainage of which the former is now known as Teluk Meranti and is o…

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Desmopuntius gemellus (KOTTELAT, 1996)

June 20th, 2012 — 3:51pm

The type series was purchased from a market in Jambi province, eastern Sumatra, Indonesia and this species is also known from neighbouring Riau province plus the island province of Bangka. On Sumatra it may be restricted to the Indragiri and Batang Hari river systems.

Inhabits peat swamp forests and associated black water streams in which the water is typically stained brown with humic acids and other chemicals released by decaying organic material. The dissolved mineral content is generally negligible and the pH can be as…

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Barbodes dunckeri (AHL, 1929)

Clown Barb

June 20th, 2012 — 1:16pm

Although sometimes referred to by the vernacular name ‘big spot barb’ this species is better known in the aquarium hobby as ‘clown barb’. It has been widely misidentified as the congener B. everetti, a distinct and uncommonly-traded species from Borneo and thus appears under that name in the majority of available literature.

The two are quite easy to tell apart, with B. everetti an overall les…

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Desmopuntius trifasciatus (KOTTELAT, 1996)

June 19th, 2012 — 4:51pm

This species is one of three similar-looking members of the genus alongside D. johorensis and D. trifasciatus, while it may also be confused with Striuntius lineatus.

Juveniles of all except S. lineatus exhibit a vertically-barred rather than laterally-striped colour pattern, the metamorphosis to adult patterning beginning at around 20 mm SL and normally being complete by 30-40 mm.

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Dawkinsia rohani (REMA DEVI, INDRA & KNIGHT, 2010)

June 18th, 2012 — 12:06pm

Known only from Kanyakumari District, Tamil Nadu state, at the southern tip of the Indian peninsula. Type locality is the Kodayar River drainage and it’s also been collected in the Paralayar and Pamburivaikal river systems.

No precise data is available but it’s certainly a pelagic, riverine species with habitats likely to vary depending on locality and time o…

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Dawkinsia exclamatio (PETHIYAGODA & KOTTELAT, 2005)

June 17th, 2012 — 12:41pm

There is a case, however, to suggest that D. exclamatio is not actually a distinct taxon but rather a natural hybrid between D. assimilis and a D. arulius-like fish (possibly D. rubrotinctus) which occur together at its type locality in the Kallada River at Thenmalai.

The potential of hybridisation is evidenced by the somewhat intermediate colour pattern in that it possesses a (roughly) W-shaped mid-lateral blot…

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Sahyadria chalakkudiensis (MENON, REMA DEVI & THOBIAS, 1999)

June 15th, 2012 — 3:33pm

S. chalakkudiensis can be told apart from S. denisonii by possession of an inferior mouth (vs. subterminal) and presence of a black marking in the dorsal-fin (vs. absence), and the scarlet body stripe being duller and terminating beneath or anterior to the dorsal-fin origin (vs. brighter and terminating beneath the centre of the dorsal-fin).

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Microdevario kubotai (KOTTELAT & WITTE, 1999)

May 24th, 2012 — 3:34pm

Apparently inhabits calm to moderately-flowing stretches of well-oxygenated headwaters and minor tributaries. Such habitats tend to comprise transparent water, substrates of sand, gravel, rocks, boulders, and patches of leaf litter, with submerged driftwood, roots of riparian vegetation, and aquatic vegetation in places.

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Microdevario nanus (KOTTELAT & WITTE, 1999)

May 24th, 2012 — 1:08pm

Towards the Andaman Sea the lower part of the delta gives way to brackish mangrove swamps. The climate is wet, with annual precipitati0n of 1500 – 2500 mm, up to 90% of which falls between mid May and mid November, and warm with average air temperatures of 22 – 37 °C over the course of the year.

At one locality M. nanus was collected in less then 30cm of water from an oxbow lake among floating Pistia-like vegetation and gra…

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