March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This species is almost unheard of in the hobby with the specimen pictured above the only one we're aware of. It was imported into the United Kingdom in late 2011 as bycatch among a shipment of mastacembelid eels from northern India, and the identification was subsequently confirmed by Justin Havird, senior author of the most recent revision of the genus.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Many loaches from the families Nemacheilidae, Balitoridae and Gastromyzontidae are also suitable but research your choices before purchase in order to be sure as some are excessively aggressive or otherwise competitive.
Gastromyzon spp. tend to exist in lo…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Much of the natural diet is likely to be composed of benthic algae plus associated micro-organisms which are rasped from solid surfaces.
In captivity it will accept good-quality dried foods and meatier items like live or frozen bloodworm but may suffer internal problems if the diet contains excessive protein.
Home-made foods usi…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
It can be distinguished from congeners by the following combination of characters: gill slit angular; presence of subopercular groove, running continuous to origin of pectoral-fin; body black with numerous, small, evenly-spaced light brown spots; head dorsum black with numerous cream spots; pectoral and pelvic fins with cream spots; caudal-fin with iridescen…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
One of the more commonly-traded members of the genus and often found in mixed shipments which may contain other Gastromyzon spp. or related fishes like Beaufortia kweichowensis. These are typically labelled ‘Borneo sucker’, ‘Hong Kong pleco’, ‘butterfly loach’, etc. regardless of species.
It’s sometimes misidentified as G. punctulatus, a species not currently traded which possesses yellow finnage and a lighter-coloured, less-intensely spo…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Field observations have revealed that individuals almost always position themselves facing into the flow, either along the sides, behind or under rocks, their specialised morphology (see ‘notes’) allowing them to feed and maintain position without being swept away.
In nature G. monticola occurs sympatrically alongside Garra borneensis, Osteochilus ingeri, Gastromyzon auronigrus, G. cornusaccus, Nemacheilus olivaceus,…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Some individuals do appear very similar to G. farragus, with noticeable spotting on the head, but can usually still be told apart by examining the caudal-fin which tends to contain only a single thick, dark vertical bar in G. farragus whereas in G. ocellatus there are more often two bars, one thick, one thinner. Intermediate forms do exist though meaning identification is sometimes tricky.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This species has probably not been seen in the aquarium trade yet but has been maintained by a few private collectors.
It can be distinguished from congeners by the following combination of characters: secondary rostrum present; complete postoral pouch present; body colour brown with up to 9 thin gold stripes; head dorsum dark brown with gold reticulate pattern; subopercular groove absent; gill slit vertical; sublacrymal groove present; sno…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
In fact G. farragus and G. ocellatus represent one of 12 pairs of cryptospecies to be found in the genus, differing in subtle aspects of patterning. Cryptospecies are defined as morphologically similar, but reproductively isolated species which in fishes often inhabit adjacent river basins but in some cases occur sympatrically. The phenomenon may be a result of parallel evolution, and is not normally considered to represent an early stage of speciation.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
G. cornusaccus can be distinguished from congeners by the following combination of characters: secondary rostrum present; incomplete postoral pouch present reduced to pockets located posterior to mouth corners; sublacrymal groove present and visible when viewed laterally; juveniles with thick, cream-coloured bars and blotches on body, adults uniformly-coloured; head dorsum plain; subopercular groove absent; gill slit vertical; snout truncate when viewed dorsally; no scales on abdomen; 55-61 lateral line scale…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
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Responsive design
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Many thanks cyprin, the image has now been removed.
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Product reviewers wanted
Hello! Very much interested in writing for you, please include me in the info. Thank you for the opportunity!
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