March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This appears to be an undescribed species, and has only been available to the aquarium hobby in limited numbers to date. The rather long-winded trade name derives from the fact that it was initially marketed as two different species, i.e., B. sp. ‘Sengalang’ and B. sp. ‘Palangka’. The spelling of the latter was later corrected but the fish may still be seen with either or both names attached.
It looks very similar to fis…
Comment » | Category: Labyrinth Fishes, Perciformes
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This fish occasionally turns up as a contaminant in shipments of A. sp. 'AR01'. The latter is usually traded as A. elongatus but that species appears endemic to higher altitude waters of the Brahmaputra drainage in Darjeeling District which borders Jalpaiguri to the north east. These flow down from the Sivalik Hills whereas the Raidak I originates in Bhutan. Only three species of Aborichthys have been officially described to date meaning this is likely to represent an undescribed speci…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Within the nominal species grouping suggested by Grant (2007) almost all B. rostrata sold in the hobby are B. sp. 'upper Brahmaputra' with B. rostrata sensu stricto rarely, if ever, available. Trade names include 'Gangetic loach', 'twin-banded loach' and 'ladder loach'. The defining characters of the group are "Pattern consisiting of 8-10 black to dark brown body bars that exhibit pale and numerous spots in juveniles, and in adults the bars can anast…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
Javanese Ricefish
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This species is widely-distributed throughout Peninsular Thailand, Malaysia (Malay Peninsula plus the states of Sabah and Sarawak, Borneo), Singapore and Indonesia, with records from the Riau Archipelago, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Bali, Lombok, and Sulawesi existing in the latter. Type locality is ‘Panimbang River, Perdana, Indonesia’.
It’s typically found in coastal, normally brac…
Comment » | Category: Beloniformes, The Rest
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
To date known only from the Jaintia Hills district, Meghalaya state, northeastern India meaning its natural waters are part of the Brahmaputra River system. The type locality is given as ‘Tre Rangriang, Jowai’ in the description paper, but we’ve been unable to locate this on any map. The paratypes were collected at ‘Thlu Muwi’, which probably refers to the ancient stone bridge built over the Muwi stream, a place popular with tourists due to the nearby Muwi waterfalls.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Danios & relatives
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Adult patterning of the different geographical forms can vary considerably though young specimens all possess 5 solid dark bars on each flank and are often confused with those species exhibiting a similar juvenile pattern, particularly B. kubotai. However the horizontal dark bars on the flanks in B. kubotai typically split at quite a young age and/or develop horizontally-orientated ‘peaks’ whereas those in B. histrionica remain solid for longer and the central bar usually has a pale spot at the top so forms a ‘y’ shape.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
Emperor Botia
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Known only from the Tanintharyi River drainage in Tanintharyi (previously Tenasserim) Division, southern Myanmar. Tanintharyi lies on the Kra Isthmus and the river bisects the central zone north-to-south before emptying into the Andaman Sea at Mergui/Myeik.
This area is not easy to access for fish collectors due to occasional conflict between the Myanma…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
Polka-Dot Loach
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Appears to be endemic to headwaters of the Salween River basin around the border between Myanmar and Thailand. The type specimens were collected from the Megathat Chaung (Megathat stream) in the upper Ataran (known as the Kasat in Thai) River basin, Kayin/Karen State, Myanmar and another population was later discovered in the Hanthayaw River (Suriya in Thai), Tak Province, Thailand.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Acanthopsoides spp. are most closely related to the horse-faced loaches of the genus Acantopsis with which they often co-occur in nature, and thus commonly referred to as 'dwarf horse-face loaches'.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Barbucca spp. are uncommon in the aquarium trade but available periodically. There exist several undescribed species and it’s possible that more than one has been exported, although to date only B. diabolica is officially recognised.
Most of the fish we’ve seen possess red eyes (when viewed at certain angles), unique tuberculation and six dark body stripes as mentioned in Roberts’ description although there are exceptio…
Comment » |
Responsive design
Nice
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Aphyosemion rectogoense
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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