A revision of the spirit loaches, genus Lepidocephalus (Cypriniformes, Cobitidae)
Author
Deein, Gridsada
Inland Fisheries Research and Development Bureau, Department of Fisheries, NIFI Building, Kasetklang, Chatuchak, Bangkok 10900 Thailand. E-mail: dgridsada @ hotmail. com
Author
Tangjitjaroen, Weerapongse
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50100, Thailand. E-mail: weerapongse @ yahoo. com
Author
Page, Lawrence M.
Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611 - 7800 USA. E-mail: lpage 1 @ ufl. edu
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-03-17
3779
3
341
352
journal article
5815
10.11646/zootaxa.3779.3.2
2055f347-d478-4d50-aad0-7e78c4b3b9c5
1175-5326
4910403
23584B50-EFAC-4BCE-A20E-9B09C22529B0
Lepidocephalus
Bleeker 1858
Lepidocephalus
Bleeker 1858:303
.
Type
species:
Cobitis macrochir
Bleeker, 1854
designated by
Bleeker 1863a:38
and
1863b:4
.
Diagnosis
.
Cobitid with lateral line complete; dorsal-fin origin over or behind pelvic-fin origin; deep, slab-sided body; scales on top of head (except
L. pahangensis
)
, cheek and opercle; eye very small and subcutaneous, or absent; 8–9 branched dorsal-fin rays; 9–13 pectoral-fin rays; 6–8 pelvic-fin rays; 42–43 vertebrae; lamina circularis a thickend 2
nd
ray of pectoral fin on mature male.
Most often confused with
Lepidocephalichthys
and
Pangio
.
Lepidocephalus
differs from
Lepidocephalichthys
in having complete lateral line (vs. no lateral line); eye very small and subcutaneous, or absent (vs. eye present, not conspicuously small); 8–9 (vs. 6) branched dorsal-fin rays; 9–13 (vs. 7) pectoral-fin rays; longer predorsal length, (>60% SL vs. ~50–55%); and lamina circularis of mature male on 2
nd
ray (vs. 7
th
and 8
th
rays) of pectoral fin (Havird
et al
. 2010). They also differ in numbers of total vertebrae (among species for which data are available) with
Lepidocephalus
having 42–43, and
Lepidocephalichthys
having 35–38 (
Roberts 1989:96
). All species of
Lepidocephalus
except
L. pahangensis
,
have scales on top of head (vs. scales absent on top of head in
Lepidocephalichthys
except in
L. kranos
and
L. irrorata
), and on the cheek and opercle (vs. scales usually absent or deeply embedded on cheek and opercle in
Lepidocephalichthys
).
Lepidocephalus
differs from
Pangio
in having scales on cheek and opercle (vs. no scales on head); complete lateral line (vs. no lateral line); eye very small and subcutaneous, or absent (vs. eye present, not so conspicuously small); 8–9 (vs. 5–6) branched dorsal-fin rays; and 6–8 (vs. 5–7) pelvic-fin rays (Havird
et al
. 2010).
Lepidocephalus
has 42–43 total vertebrae (among species for which data are available), and
Pangio
has 45–71 total vertebrae (
Roberts 1989:96
, as species of
Acantophthalmus
).
In general appearance,
Lepidocephalus
is deep-bodied and slab-sided, and is readily distinguishable from
Lepidocephalichthys
,
which is more slender and much less slab-sided, and
Pangio
,
which is long, slender and generally eel-like in appearance.
Based on nuclear gene data,
Šlechtová
et al
. (2008)
hypothesized
Lepidocephalus
to be closely related to
Canthophrys gongata
(Hamilton 1822)
, a species native to
India
,
Nepal
,
Burma
, Bangadesh and
Pakistan
(
Shrestha, 2008
;
Talwar and Jhingran, 1991
). However, there is no morphological evidence to suggest a close relationship between
Lepidocephalus
and
Canthophrys
. Species of
Lepidocephalus
differ greatly from
Canthophrys gongata
in general appearance, and lack the pattern of black dorsal saddles and black spots on the side of the body and the wide depressed head with large upwardly directed eyes. They also differ in having the lamina circularis on the 2
nd
ray (vs. medial rays) of the pectoral fin, and in having (vs. lacking) scales on the head.