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Nemacheilus platiceps KOTTELAT, 1990

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

This species is only traded occasionally. It’s distinguished from congeners by a combination of characters including: 12-16 dark, irregular, vertical bars on body, usually split vertically; lips without furrows; inco…

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Nemacheilus pallidus KOTTELAT, 1990

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

The similar-looking N. masyai is sometimes traded as N. pallidus, but the two can be told apart by body depth (14.8-19.1 % in N. pallidus vs. 12.6-17.6 % SL in N. masyai), interorbital width (5.7-8.0 % vs. 4.9-6.8 % SL) and the fact that in N. pallidus the dark body bars and saddles are thinner than the light-coloured interspaces between (vs. wider in N. masyai).

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Pangio myersi (HARRY, 1949)

Giant Kuhli Loach

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

It’s included in the P. kuhlii group of closely-related species and can be distinguished from other members by the following combination of characters: 8-11 very broad, quadrangular, regular dark body bars; orange base body colour; caudal-fin either entirely black or with a large black blotch at the base and a submarginal dark bar or row of spots. The latter feature can be useful in identifying young or newly-imported, undernourished specimens which can…

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Pangio anguillaris (VAILLANT, 1902)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

One of a handful of Pangio spp. traded under the generic name ‘eel loach’. Wild populations tend to differ in colour pattern to some extent, with some exhibiting a more intense lateral stripe while others display an irregular pattern of fine dark spots on the body, for example.

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Lepidocephalichthys kranos HAVIRD & PAGE, 2010

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

The family Cobitidae, often referred to as ‘true’ loaches, is widely-distributed across most of Eurasia with the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia and China representing particular centres of species diversity.

Phylogenetic analyses by Tang et al. (2006), Šlechtová et al. (2007) and Šlechtová et a…

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Lepidocephalichthys sp. 'LE1'

Vietnamese Marbled Hog-faced Loach

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

This fish has only been traded on a handful of occasions to date. It's been referred to as Lepidocephalichthys cf. hasselti and Lepidocephalus cf. thermalis but appears to be an undescribed member of the former genus. Following a…

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Homalopteroides smithi (HORA, 1932)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Described from close to the village of Ban Khiri Wong, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province, southern (peninsular) Thailand but since recorded throughout much of the country, including the Chao Phraya and Mekong river systems.

It’s also known from Peninsular Malaysia and parts of the Mekong basin in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Rainboth (1996) considered it ‘probably the commonest member of the genus in the Mekong’ and in a 2008 study of balitorid habitats in centra…

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Homalopteroides tweediei (HERRE, 1940)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Described from Kota Tinggi district, Johor state, Peninsular Malaysia but since recorded throughout much of the country as well as parts of the the Mekong river system in Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam plus the Kapuas and several other river basins in Kalimantan Barat (West Kalimantan) province, Indonesian Borneo.

In the Kahang River, part of the Endau drainage in Jo…

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Annamia cf. thuathienensis NGUYEN, 2005

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Annamia spp. may be confused with related genera such as those of the genus Balitoropsis. They can be identified by their more depressed body shape, elongate lower caudal-fin lobe, and the presence of a single unbranched ray in the pectoral and pelvic fins. At least one undescribed member of the genus is thought to exist.

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Lepidocephalichthys hasselti (VALENCIENNES, 1846)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

At one locality close to Ban Na Hwai, Chiang Mai Province, Thailand L. hasselti was collected from a shallow (<0.5 m) pool in a swampy zone between forest and rice fields. The substrate was of mud, there was no aquatic vegetation and it was being used as drinking water by local animals, with the only effluent connected to a 'small creek'. Other species found there were Physoschistura pseudobrunneana, Rasbora hobelmani and Systomus cf. orphoides.

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