Fishes of Afghanistan; a revised and updated annotated checklist
Author
Çiçek, Erdoğan
Author
Fricke, Ronald
0000-0003-1476-6990
Author
Eagderi, Soheil
0000-0002-1134-0356
Author
Sungur, Sevil
0000-0003-4018-6375
Author
Coad, Brian W
0000-0002-7232-961X
Author
Hamdard, Mohammad Hamid
0000-0002-5915-6574
erdogancicek@nevsehir.edu.tr
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-06-16
5305
1
1
69
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5305.1.1
journal article
56221
10.11646/zootaxa.5305.1.1
c640363c-14f9-4912-8a38-2948ab4946f1
1175-5326
8048564
55EB7903-BB1A-45F9-9660-16DAF957C67A
Aplocheilus panchax
(
Hamilton, 1822
)
[N]—Blue panchax
Taxonomy.
Original description:
Esox panchax
Hamilton, 1822: 211
, 380, pl. 3, fig. 69 (ditches and ponds of Bengal; no
types
known).—
Afghanistan
synonyms: None.—Revisions:
Seegers (1997: 16)
.—Illustration:
Hamilton (1822
: pl. 3, fig. 69) as
Esox panchax
;
Britz (2019
: pl. 119).
Status in
Afghanistan
.
First record from Afghanistan by
Hora (1935)
; confirmed by
Coad (1981: 8)
.—Afghanistan materials: None.
Distribution and habitat.
Distribution in
Afghanistan
: Chahiltran Stream, tributary of
Kabul
River, West
Kabul
City,
Afghanistan
.—General distribution: South Asia:
Pakistan
,
India
,
Nepal
,
Bangladesh
and
Myanmar
; introduced in
Sulawesi
(
Indonesia
).—Habitat: This species is found in clear, shallow, and brackish waters at low altitudes, as well as in estuaries, ditches, ponds, and canals, reservoirs, and mangrove creeks. This species is a larvivorous fish, and its utility for mosquito control has been well established. This species is a perennial breeder with a spawning maximum in the monsoon months. It breeds at
8 cm
and attains a length of
9 cm
. Maturity is attained in four to five months. The eggs, when laid, are attached to submersibles. Freshwater, brackish.
Economic importance.
Valuable for the aquarium trade.
Reasons of introduction.
Ornamental fish industry.
Conservation.
Conservation status in
Afghanistan
: Unknown.—IUCN: LC (
Chaudhry & Chakrabarty 2018
).— Threats: COM, EUT.—High sensitivity to human activities.—Keystone species.—Decline status: Unknown.— Moderate priority for conservation action.