Genera of the Asian Catfish Families Sisoridae and Erethistidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes).
Author
Alfred W. Thomson
Author
Lawrence M. Page
text
Zootaxa
2006
1345
1
96
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:25EFA792-7DA4-4E0D-A69A-12591B8422DE
journal article
z01345p001
25EFA792-7DA4-4E0D-A69A-12591B8422DE
Exostoma Blyth, 1860
Fig. 19
Exostoma Blyth, 1860
: 155. (Type species:
Exostoma berdmori Blyth, 1860
, by subsequent designation, by Bleeker (1863: 105). Gender neuter.
Diagnosis: Continuous post-labial groove; gill openings not extending onto venter; homodont dentition; oar-shaped, distally flattened teeth in both jaws; tooth patches separated in upper jaw; 10-11 branched pectoral rays.
Exostoma
is distinguished from
Glyptosternon
,
Glaridoglanis
,
Pareuchiloglanis
,
Euchiloglanis
and
Parachiloglanis
by having a continuous post-labial groove (Table 5).
Exostoma
is distinguished from
Pseudexostoma
and
Oreoglanis
by having homodont (vs. heterodont) dentition in the lower jaw. It is further distinguished from
Oreoglanis
by having oar-shaped, distally flattened (vs. pointed) teeth in the upper jaw, and from
Pseudexostoma
by having homodont (vs. heterodont) teeth in the upper jaw.
Exostoma
is distinguished from
Myersglanis
by having tooth patches separated in the upper jaw and oar-shaped, distally flattened teeth in both jaws (vs. tooth patches juxtaposed and pointed teeth in both jaws).
Exostoma
is further distinguished from
Pseudexostoma
and
Oreoglanis
by having 10-11 branched pectoral rays (vs. 16-18).
Description: 6-7 dorsal rays; 10-11 branched pectoral-fin rays; 6 pelvic-fin rays; 5-8 anal-fin rays. Head depressed; snout broadly rounded; body elongate, flattened ventrally to pelvic fins. Eyes minute, dorsal, subcutaneous. Lips thick, fleshy, papillated. Teeth small to large, moveable, oar-shaped, flattened distally and directed posteriorly in distinct patches. Maxillary barbel with well-developed membrane, soft base, and striated pad of adhesive skin. Gill openings narrow, not extending below pectoral-fin base. Branchiostegal membranes confluent with isthmus. Coracoid process not externally visible. No thoracic adhesive apparatus. Paired fins plaited to form an adhesive apparatus.
Distribution: Brahmaputra drainage, northeast India, east and south to the Salween drainages, Myanmar (Kottelat, 1989; Chu et al., 1999; Jayaram, 1999).