Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871

Neolissochilus stracheyi (Day 1871) Specimens examined: upper Ea Krong No drainage: upper Mekong basin in montane evergreen forest in Bidoup- Núi Bà National Park, Lâm Đồng Province, Vietnam (12 ° 14 ’ 57.47 ” N 108 ° 40 ’ 31.41 ” E, 1101 m): UNS 00603, 193 mm SL, 13 March 2012; UNS 00604...

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Main Authors: Hoàng, Ức, Ạm, Ạnh Ph, Durand, Jean-Dominique, Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr, Phan, Phúc Đình
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631583
https://zenodo.org/record/5631583
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5631583
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Cypriniformes
Cyprinidae
Neolissochilus
Neolissochilus stracheyi
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Cypriniformes
Cyprinidae
Neolissochilus
Neolissochilus stracheyi
Hoàng, Ức
Ạm, Ạnh Ph
Durand, Jean-Dominique
Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr
Phan, Phúc Đình
Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Chordata
Actinopterygii
Cypriniformes
Cyprinidae
Neolissochilus
Neolissochilus stracheyi
description Neolissochilus stracheyi (Day 1871) Specimens examined: upper Ea Krong No drainage: upper Mekong basin in montane evergreen forest in Bidoup- Núi Bà National Park, Lâm Đồng Province, Vietnam (12 ° 14 ’ 57.47 ” N 108 ° 40 ’ 31.41 ” E, 1101 m): UNS 00603, 193 mm SL, 13 March 2012; UNS 00604, 256 mm SL, 19 February 2012 (12 ° 15 ’ 36.6 ” N 108 ° 30 ’ 44.5 ” E, 856 m); UNS 00865 – 871, 212 – 322 mm SL, 8 March 2013 (12 ° 15 ’ 5.25 ” N 108 ° 38 ’ 32.48 ” E, 1025 m); UNS 00863 – 864, 160 – 163 mm SL, 5 March 2013 (12 ° 14 ’ 57.47 ” N 108 ° 40 ’ 31.41 ” E, 1101 m); UNS 00872, 308 mm SL, 25 June 2014 (12 ° 16 ’ 23.68 ” N 108 ° 26 ’ 30.17 ” E, 672 m); UNS 00948 – 949, 287 – 428 mm SL, 22–24 January 2015 (12 ° 16 ’ 48.63 ” N 108 ° 31 ’ 40.85 ” E, 754 m); UNS 00950, 534 mm SL, 22 January 2015 (12 ° 16 ’ 47.88 ” N 108 ° 30 ’ 20.75 ” E, 720 m); the An Lão River, Bình Định Province, Vietnam (14 ° 40 ’ 30.6 ” N 108 ° 54 ’ 13.4 ” E, 547 m): UNS 00768, UNS 00770, UNS 00870, 113–130 mm SL, 21 January 2013 (Fig. 2). Diagnosis. Neolissochilus stracheyi differs from N. hendersoni and N. soroides in lateral stripe present vs. absent. Neolissochilus stracheyi differs from N. benasi in lateral scales 24–28 vs. 31–32, transverse scale rows 3 / 1 / 2, vs. 4 / 1 / 3. Neolissochilus stracheyi in this study is similar to N. blanci from Laos (Pellegrin & Fang 1940, Rainboth et al . 2012) in living colour, morphometric and meristic characters. From 13 March 2012 to 22 January 2015 a sample of 17 fresh N . stracheyi was collected from the upper Krong No River in Bidoup-Núi Bà National Park. The following data were obtained: Neolissochilus -like morph: 16 individuals, 113–534 mm SL with moderately developed lips and without a submentum on the lower lip (Fig. 4 l, m). Among this morph, there were two body-colour types: bronze with a slate-grey lateral stripe (Fig. 7 a, b, e) and golden lacking a lateral stripe and becoming progressively lighter to silvery white below (Fig. 7 c). The lateral stripe appears in preserved specimens of both body colour types. Individuals of both types have the caudal fin deeply forked, but the lateral stripe type has a convex distal margin on each lobe of the caudal fin, and the golden type has a straight distal margin on each lobe. Tor -like morph: 1 individual, 428 mm (UNS 00949): rostral hood straight and pointed. Lips thick, fleshy; upper lip rolled backwards and upwards without median projection; median lobe of lower lip broad, thick and long as the most highly developed mentum in species of the genus Tor . Body-colour bronze with faint slate-grey lateral stripe (Figs. 4 i, k and 7 d). Ecology. All specimens of the new species and new records were found in the Ea Krong No drainage, consisting of montane mixed pine and evergreen forest (Fig. 8 c). Our survey also recorded the occurrence of N. stracheyi in the An Lão River at ~ 500 m, in the Krong Ana River at ~ 431m elevation, Chư Yang Sin National Park (12 ° 29 ’ 50.9 ” N 108 ° 20 ’ 29.6 ” E) and the Đồng Nai River at ~ 650 m elevation, Tà Đùng Nature Reserve (11 ° 45 ’ 10.4 ” N 108 °00’3.0” E). While N. stracheyi occurs along the main river and in streams between 596–1112 m, T. mekongensis and T . tambra occur in lower elevations between 596– 850 m. Water conditions where N . stracheyi occur were 17−26 °C, with pH 6.5−7.66, DO 79−88.6 %, conductivity 10–34 µS.cm - 1 and flow velocity 0.17−0.77 m /s. Water conditions where Tor occur were 21−26 °C, with pH 7−7.66, DO 79−80.6 %, conductivity 32−34 µS.cm - 1 and flow velocity 0.20−0.77 m /s. Mahseers of the Krong No River occurred in lotic habitats of main streams, particularly in deep pools. In the early wet season (June −July), mature individuals move to the depositional zone in moderate flowing pools (5–7 m deep and 20–50 m wide) with detritus and fallen leaves for gonadal development (villagers, pers. com.). The juveniles often inhabit shallow areas with mixed silt and sand, slower flow and submergent plants. They share this habitat with Poropuntius sp., Hampala macrolepidota , and Onychostoma krongnoensis . During wet season surveys (October 2011, May 2013 and June 2014), many juvenile fishes were observed (Fig. 8 a). Mahseers of Tor and Neolissochilus usually roam in shoals of 20–30 individuals in swift currents or in slow flowing pools (2–3 m deep) for foraging (Fig. 8 b). They feed on plant matter, fallen fruits and insects from riparian vegetation (Rainboth 1996). Villagers claim that mahseers and carps are often found inside the underwater rock caves or trunks of large trees in the stream bank. All specimens of T. dongnaiensis were found in the middle Đồng Nai drainage between 140−200 m (Fig. 8 d). Water conditions were 23−26 °C, pH 7−7.66, DO 75−81.7 %, conductivity 33−40 µS.cm - 1 and flow velocity 0.05−1.3 m /s. This species shares habitat with Labeo spp., Gyrinocheilus aymonieri , Cosmocheilus harmandi , Hampala macrolepidota , Hypsibarbus spp., Wallago attu , Bagarius yarrelli , and Hemibagrus spp. : Published as part of Hoàng, Ức, Ạm, Ạnh Ph, Durand, Jean-Dominique, Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr & Phan, Phúc Đình, 2015, Mahseers genera To r and Neolissochilus (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) from southern Vietnam, pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4006 (3) on pages 563-565, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4006.3.8, http://zenodo.org/record/246039 : {"references": ["Day, F. (1871) Monograph of Indian Cyprinidae, (Part II). Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 40, 277 - 336.", "Pellegrin, J. & Fang, P. W. (1940) Poissons du Laos recueillis par MM. Delacour, Greenway, Ed. Blanc. Description d'un genre, de cinq especes et d'une variete. Bulletin de la Societe zoologique de France, 65, 111 - 123.", "Rainboth, W. J., Vidthayanon, C. & Mai, D. Y. (2012) Fishes of the greater Mekong ecosystem with species list and photographic atlas. Miscellaneous Publications, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 201, 173 pp, pls. 1 - 121.", "Rainboth, W. J. (1996) Fishes of the Cambodian Mekong. FAO Species Identification Field Guide for Fishery Purposes, Rome, 265 pp."]}
format Text
author Hoàng, Ức
Ạm, Ạnh Ph
Durand, Jean-Dominique
Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr
Phan, Phúc Đình
author_facet Hoàng, Ức
Ạm, Ạnh Ph
Durand, Jean-Dominique
Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr
Phan, Phúc Đình
author_sort Hoàng, Ức
title Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871
title_short Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871
title_full Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871
title_fullStr Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871
title_full_unstemmed Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871
title_sort neolissochilus stracheyi day 1871
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631583
https://zenodo.org/record/5631583
long_lat ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483)
ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)
geographic Fang
Indian
Stripe
geographic_facet Fang
Indian
Stripe
genre Attu
genre_facet Attu
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5631583 2023-05-15T15:33:35+02:00 Neolissochilus stracheyi Day 1871 Hoàng, Ức Ạm, Ạnh Ph Durand, Jean-Dominique Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr Phan, Phúc Đình 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631583 https://zenodo.org/record/5631583 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/246039 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFFE5D3E7E2171187E4903075914FFF0 http://zoobank.org/CBDC7284-7EF2-49F4-A875-13E79B597E0A https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4006.3.8 http://zenodo.org/record/246039 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFFE5D3E7E2171187E4903075914FFF0 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246041 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246043 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246046 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246047 http://zoobank.org/CBDC7284-7EF2-49F4-A875-13E79B597E0A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631582 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Chordata Actinopterygii Cypriniformes Cyprinidae Neolissochilus Neolissochilus stracheyi Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631583 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4006.3.8 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246041 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246043 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246046 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246047 https://do 2022-02-08T12:23:07Z Neolissochilus stracheyi (Day 1871) Specimens examined: upper Ea Krong No drainage: upper Mekong basin in montane evergreen forest in Bidoup- Núi Bà National Park, Lâm Đồng Province, Vietnam (12 ° 14 ’ 57.47 ” N 108 ° 40 ’ 31.41 ” E, 1101 m): UNS 00603, 193 mm SL, 13 March 2012; UNS 00604, 256 mm SL, 19 February 2012 (12 ° 15 ’ 36.6 ” N 108 ° 30 ’ 44.5 ” E, 856 m); UNS 00865 – 871, 212 – 322 mm SL, 8 March 2013 (12 ° 15 ’ 5.25 ” N 108 ° 38 ’ 32.48 ” E, 1025 m); UNS 00863 – 864, 160 – 163 mm SL, 5 March 2013 (12 ° 14 ’ 57.47 ” N 108 ° 40 ’ 31.41 ” E, 1101 m); UNS 00872, 308 mm SL, 25 June 2014 (12 ° 16 ’ 23.68 ” N 108 ° 26 ’ 30.17 ” E, 672 m); UNS 00948 – 949, 287 – 428 mm SL, 22–24 January 2015 (12 ° 16 ’ 48.63 ” N 108 ° 31 ’ 40.85 ” E, 754 m); UNS 00950, 534 mm SL, 22 January 2015 (12 ° 16 ’ 47.88 ” N 108 ° 30 ’ 20.75 ” E, 720 m); the An Lão River, Bình Định Province, Vietnam (14 ° 40 ’ 30.6 ” N 108 ° 54 ’ 13.4 ” E, 547 m): UNS 00768, UNS 00770, UNS 00870, 113–130 mm SL, 21 January 2013 (Fig. 2). Diagnosis. Neolissochilus stracheyi differs from N. hendersoni and N. soroides in lateral stripe present vs. absent. Neolissochilus stracheyi differs from N. benasi in lateral scales 24–28 vs. 31–32, transverse scale rows 3 / 1 / 2, vs. 4 / 1 / 3. Neolissochilus stracheyi in this study is similar to N. blanci from Laos (Pellegrin & Fang 1940, Rainboth et al . 2012) in living colour, morphometric and meristic characters. From 13 March 2012 to 22 January 2015 a sample of 17 fresh N . stracheyi was collected from the upper Krong No River in Bidoup-Núi Bà National Park. The following data were obtained: Neolissochilus -like morph: 16 individuals, 113–534 mm SL with moderately developed lips and without a submentum on the lower lip (Fig. 4 l, m). Among this morph, there were two body-colour types: bronze with a slate-grey lateral stripe (Fig. 7 a, b, e) and golden lacking a lateral stripe and becoming progressively lighter to silvery white below (Fig. 7 c). The lateral stripe appears in preserved specimens of both body colour types. Individuals of both types have the caudal fin deeply forked, but the lateral stripe type has a convex distal margin on each lobe of the caudal fin, and the golden type has a straight distal margin on each lobe. Tor -like morph: 1 individual, 428 mm (UNS 00949): rostral hood straight and pointed. Lips thick, fleshy; upper lip rolled backwards and upwards without median projection; median lobe of lower lip broad, thick and long as the most highly developed mentum in species of the genus Tor . Body-colour bronze with faint slate-grey lateral stripe (Figs. 4 i, k and 7 d). Ecology. All specimens of the new species and new records were found in the Ea Krong No drainage, consisting of montane mixed pine and evergreen forest (Fig. 8 c). Our survey also recorded the occurrence of N. stracheyi in the An Lão River at ~ 500 m, in the Krong Ana River at ~ 431m elevation, Chư Yang Sin National Park (12 ° 29 ’ 50.9 ” N 108 ° 20 ’ 29.6 ” E) and the Đồng Nai River at ~ 650 m elevation, Tà Đùng Nature Reserve (11 ° 45 ’ 10.4 ” N 108 °00’3.0” E). While N. stracheyi occurs along the main river and in streams between 596–1112 m, T. mekongensis and T . tambra occur in lower elevations between 596– 850 m. Water conditions where N . stracheyi occur were 17−26 °C, with pH 6.5−7.66, DO 79−88.6 %, conductivity 10–34 µS.cm - 1 and flow velocity 0.17−0.77 m /s. Water conditions where Tor occur were 21−26 °C, with pH 7−7.66, DO 79−80.6 %, conductivity 32−34 µS.cm - 1 and flow velocity 0.20−0.77 m /s. Mahseers of the Krong No River occurred in lotic habitats of main streams, particularly in deep pools. In the early wet season (June −July), mature individuals move to the depositional zone in moderate flowing pools (5–7 m deep and 20–50 m wide) with detritus and fallen leaves for gonadal development (villagers, pers. com.). The juveniles often inhabit shallow areas with mixed silt and sand, slower flow and submergent plants. They share this habitat with Poropuntius sp., Hampala macrolepidota , and Onychostoma krongnoensis . During wet season surveys (October 2011, May 2013 and June 2014), many juvenile fishes were observed (Fig. 8 a). Mahseers of Tor and Neolissochilus usually roam in shoals of 20–30 individuals in swift currents or in slow flowing pools (2–3 m deep) for foraging (Fig. 8 b). They feed on plant matter, fallen fruits and insects from riparian vegetation (Rainboth 1996). Villagers claim that mahseers and carps are often found inside the underwater rock caves or trunks of large trees in the stream bank. All specimens of T. dongnaiensis were found in the middle Đồng Nai drainage between 140−200 m (Fig. 8 d). Water conditions were 23−26 °C, pH 7−7.66, DO 75−81.7 %, conductivity 33−40 µS.cm - 1 and flow velocity 0.05−1.3 m /s. This species shares habitat with Labeo spp., Gyrinocheilus aymonieri , Cosmocheilus harmandi , Hampala macrolepidota , Hypsibarbus spp., Wallago attu , Bagarius yarrelli , and Hemibagrus spp. : Published as part of Hoàng, Ức, Ạm, Ạnh Ph, Durand, Jean-Dominique, Ần, Ngân Tr Ọng Tr & Phan, Phúc Đình, 2015, Mahseers genera To r and Neolissochilus (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) from southern Vietnam, pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4006 (3) on pages 563-565, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4006.3.8, http://zenodo.org/record/246039 : {"references": ["Day, F. (1871) Monograph of Indian Cyprinidae, (Part II). Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 40, 277 - 336.", "Pellegrin, J. & Fang, P. W. (1940) Poissons du Laos recueillis par MM. Delacour, Greenway, Ed. Blanc. Description d'un genre, de cinq especes et d'une variete. Bulletin de la Societe zoologique de France, 65, 111 - 123.", "Rainboth, W. J., Vidthayanon, C. & Mai, D. Y. (2012) Fishes of the greater Mekong ecosystem with species list and photographic atlas. Miscellaneous Publications, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 201, 173 pp, pls. 1 - 121.", "Rainboth, W. J. (1996) Fishes of the Cambodian Mekong. FAO Species Identification Field Guide for Fishery Purposes, Rome, 265 pp."]} Text Attu DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Fang ENVELOPE(167.217,167.217,-77.483,-77.483) Indian Stripe ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)