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Leptobotia elongata (BLEEKER, 1870)

Imperial Flower Loach

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

This species is rare in the aquarium trade, increasingly so in nature and as a result prohibitively expensive when available. Given its adult size and probable longevity this is therefore a species for the specialist possessing the necessary time, money and dedication to house it long term.

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Liniparhomaloptera disparis (LIN, 1934)

Broken-band Hillstream Loach

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

L. disparis is sometimes available as bycatch among shipments of other species such as Rhinogobius duospilus but also appears on trade lists under the fictitious scientific name ‘Homaloptera hoffmani’.

It can be told apart from similar-looking members of the genus Formosania by its noticeably shorter barbels and from Vanmanenia spp. by the fact that the rostral fold is not lobed and the mouth is relatively small (25% head width. In addition the lower lip in Liniparhomaloptera is not divided and has a flat, papillated edge.

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Hypergastromyzon humilis ROBERTS, 1989

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

The differences in pelvic-fin structure and gill openings led Roberts to redefine the genus when describing H. eubranchus, whereas Tan (2006) expressed doubts that the two are even congeneric but was unable to reach a definitive conclusion in the absence of fresh material.

At any rate both species can be easily differentiated from Gastromyzon and Neogastromyzon spp. by observing the mo…

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Lepidocephalus macrochir (BLEEKER, 1854)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

The distribution records for this species are somewhat confusing. It was described from the confluence of the Lamatang and Enim rivers, Palambang Province, Sumatra and has since been recorded from Thailand (Chao Phraya River), Peninsular Malaysia (Pahang River) plus the islands of Java (Solo River) and Borneo (Kapuas and Barito rivers).

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Lepidocephalichthys thermalis (VALENCIENNES, 1846)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

This species is available sporadically and makes an excellent choice for those new to keeping loaches. It’s distinguishable from congeners by a combination of characters including: truncate/rounded caudal-fin; no scales on top of head; dark, squarish spots o…

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Kottelatlimia pristes (ROBERTS, 1989)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

The genus Kottelatlimia was erected by Nalbant (1994) to accommodate K. katik which had previously been assigned to Lepidocephalichthys but differs in various aspects noted earlier by Kottelat and Lim (1992) including: relatively small adult size; scaleless…

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Kottelatlimia katik (KOTTELAT & LIM, 1992)

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

We’re unaware of this species having yet appeared in the aquarium trade although a few private collectors have experience with it. Among congeners it uniquely possesses a simple suborbital spine and further differs from K. pristes by: smaller adult size (13.5 mm SL vs. 40); presence of a long nasal barbel (vs. absence); anatomy of the modified second pectoral ray in males (6-7 fine, narrow serrae vs. 8-11 pointed, anteriorly-orientated serrae). In K. hipporhynchos the serrae on the second pectoral ray in males form a broad, contiguous blade-like structure but other differences are the same as for K. pristes.

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Kottelatlimia hipporhynchos KOTTELAT & TAN, 2008

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

This species differs from congeners in the presence of papillae covering the mouthparts (lips, barbels, and lobes) which are absent in other species. It’s also the largest species in the genus and the serrae on the second pectoral fin rays in males form a broa…

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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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Betadevario ramachandrani PRAMOD, FANG, REMA DEVI, LIAO, INDRA, JAMEELA BEEVI & KULLANDER, 2010

March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm

As far as we know this species is yet to arrive to the international aquarium trade though it has been maintained by a handful of Indian aquarists.

It’s restricted geographical range and difficulty of collection mean it’s unlikely to become available in numbers unless adopted by commercial breeders.

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