Freshwater fishes of Israel; a revised and updated annotated checklist- 2023
Author
Çiçek, Erdoğan
Department of Biology, Faculty of Art and Sciences, Nevşehir Hacı BektaşVeli University, Nevşehir, Türkiye
Author
Fricke, Ronald
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde in Stuttgart, Rosenstein 1, 70191 Stuttgart, Germany
Author
Sungur, Sevil
Health Services Vocational School, Nevşehir Hacı BektaşVeli University, Nevşehir, Türkiye
Author
Çapar, Osman Bahadir
Faculty of Fisheries, Cukurova University, Türkiye
Author
Golani, Daniel
Deparment of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-11-13
5369
4
451
484
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5369.4.1/52255
journal article
278560
10.11646/zootaxa.5369.4.1
8a95fa8d-aaf9-4550-9a5b-0e8408ecb1bd
1175-5326
10146651
62878FA8-7CC7-462C-9FBF-C9BAEF177855
Aphaniops dispar
(Rüppell, 1829)
[N]—Arabian toothcarp; Na’avit ha’mlyhot
Taxonomy.
Original description:
Lebias dispar
Rüppell, 1829: 66
, pl. 18, figs. 1-2 [Red Sea;
lectotype
: SMF 821].—
Israel
synonyms:
Aphanius dispar
(Rüppell, 1829)
.—Revisions:
Teimori
et al.
(2018)
and
Esmaeili
et al.
(2020)
.—Illustration: Rüppell (1829: pl. 18, figs. 1-2) as
Lebias dispar
, Banister & Clarke
(1977: 144, fig. 30) as
Aphanius dispar
.
Status in
Israel
.
First record from Israel by
Richardson (1856)
; confirmed by
Krupp & Schneider (1989)
.—Israel material: HUJ.
Distribution and habitat.
Distribution in
Israel
: En Feshkha (Enot Zuqim) and springs running to the Dead Sea and Mediterranean Sea watersheds.—Distribution in River Basin: 1-Western Basin, 2-Dead Sea Basin.—General distribution: Middle East: Shores of the Red Sea and Gulf of
Aden
, and easternmost Mediterranean Sea basin;
Socotra
(northwestern Indian Ocean).—Distribution in Ecoregion: 436-Coastal Levant, 438-
Jordan
River.—Habitat: This species is euryhyaline, inshore habitats with dense structures of vegetation or stones. Also common in coral reefs in the Red Sea and widely distributed in lower parts of rivers, streams, and all kind of inland water bodies, especially if these have brackish waters. Very rarely reported in freshwater habitats. Spawns on plants, algae and rock fissures. Freshwater, brackish.
Economic importance.
No commercial importance. Has the potential to be used as aquarium fish.
Conservation.
Conservation Status in
Israel
: Unknown.—IUCN: LC (
IUCN 2023
).—Threats: HAB.—Low sensitivity to human activities.—Not considered a keystone species.—Decline status: Stable.—Low priority for conservation action.