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Pangio malayana (TWEEDIE, 1956)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Originally known only from Johor and Pahang states, Peninsular Malaysia but since recorded from the Batang Hari river drainage, Sumatra and the Kapuas system, Kalimantan Barat (West Kalimantan) province, Indonesian Borneo. Type locality is ‘Tahan River, Pahang, Malaysia’.

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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 doriae (PERUGIA, 1892)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

One of a handful of Pangio spp. traded under the generic name ‘eel loach’, though it’s most commonly available as bycatch among shipments of other fishes. Some authors have suggested it may be synonymous with P. anguillaris bu…

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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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Pangio cuneovirgata (RAUT, 1957)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Infrequently encountered in the aquarium trade, most often as bycatch among shipments of similar-looking congeners. It’s included in the P. kuhlii group of closely-related species within the genus, and can be distinguished from other members by…

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Leptobotia pellegrini FANG, 1936

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Described from Sichuan province, southwestern China (presumably the upper Yangzte River, aka Chang Jiang, drainage) and also known from parts of the Pearl River (Zhu Jiang) basin in Guangxi Autonomous Region. The latter area is one of the most populous and industrialised in China meaning much of the main river channel is now highly polluted. Its relatively wide distribution probably explains why it’s commoner in the aquarium hobby than the similar-looking…

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Leptobotia rubrilabris (DABRY DE THIERSANT, 1872)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Should be kept in a set-up designed to resemble a flowing stream with a substrate of variably-sized rocks, gravel and some water-worn boulders. This can be further furnished with driftwood roots and branches arranged to form some shaded spots while lengths of PVC piping or similar can be used to provide additional cover. Although most plant species will fail to thrive in such surroundings hardy genera such as Microsorum, Bolbitis or Anubias spp. can be grown attached to the décor and bright lighting will promote the growth of aufwuchs.

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Leptobotia taeniops (SAUVAGE, 1878)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

L. taeniops is almost unheard of in the aquarium trade although we know of one or two private collectors maintaining it. It was previously included in the related genus Parabotia.

L. elongata is the type species of the genus but according to current thinking there exi…

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Leptobotia guilinensis CHEN, 1980

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

L. elongata is the type species of the genus but according to current knowledge there exist 13 members in total, all of which are endemic to China and northern Vietnam. They’re diagnosable by the following shared characters: possession of a simple (non-bifurcated), short sub-ocular spine not extending beyond the posterior edge of the eye; a laterally-compressed body; relatively deep caudal peduncle; pelvic fins reaching origin of anal-fin; anus below base of dorsal-fin and equidistant between pelvic and anal-fin origins.

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Leptobotia microphthalma FU & YE, 1983

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

Superficially similar to L. tientainensis but according to the formal description can be separated by a combination of characters including: more deeply-forked caudal-fin (shortest central rays fit 2.6-2.9 times in the outer rays vs. 1.7-2.5 times); significantly smaller eye (fits 26 times in head length vs. 10 times); caudal-fin with 1-2 dark bands at lateral edges v…

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