Fig. 4 in Fig. 4 in Fig. 3 in Fig. 21. Sesarmops mora n in Paralbunea dayriti
Author
Jouladeh-Roudbar, Arash
Department of Fisheries, Faculty of Natural Resources, University of Tehran, Karaj, Alborz, Iran. E-mail: jouladehroudbar @ ut. ac. ir
jouladehroudbar@ut.ac.ir
Author
Ghanavi, Hamid Reza
Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden. * Correspondence: E-mail: hamid. ghanavi @ gmail. com (Ghanavi)
hamid.ghanavi@gmail.com
Author
Doadrio, Ignacio
Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology Department, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales-CSIC, Madrid, Spain. E-mail: doadrio @ mncn. csic. es
doadrio@mncn.csic.es
text
Zoological Studies
2020
2020-06-29
59
21
1
303
http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12822535
journal article
10.6620/ZS.2020.59-21
1810-522X
Alburnoides tabarestanensis
Mousavi-Sabet, Anvarifar and Azizi, 2015
– Endemic
(
Fig. 219
)
Alburnoides tabarestanensis
Mousavi-Sabet
[H.], AnvariFar [H.] & Azizi [F.] 2015: 146;
Type
locality: Tajan
River
, southern
Fig. 216.
Distribution map of
Alburnoides qanati
.
Caspian Sea basin,
Mazandaran Province
,
Iran
,
36°11'N
,
53°19'E
.
Holotype
: VMFC AL201MH.
Paratypes
: GUIC ALT–P (4), VMFC AL2049P (45).
Common name
: Pr: Khayateh-e Tabarestani, Lapek, En: Tabarestan Spirlin.
Diagnosis
: Lack of obvious dark spots or pigmentation in the lateral line canal, terminal mouth with the tip of the mouth cleft between level of middle of pupil and lower margin of pupil, 2.5–4.2 pharyngeal teeth, usually 4 or 5 scale rows between lateral line and anal fin origin.
Fig. 217.
Alburnoides samiii
(up: male, down: female). Photograph from Sefidrud River, Caspian Sea basin.
Fig. 218.
Distribution map of
Alburnoides samiii
.
Meristic characters
: D: III 7–9 (8), A: III 11–14 (12), P: 11–14 (12–13), V: 6–7 (7), GR: 7–10 (8–9), LL: 47–54, TV: 39–41.
Distribution
: Caspian Sea basin (
Fig. 220
). Occurs in several rivers in central parts of the Southern Caspian Sea basin,
i.e.
, Tajan, Siyahrud, Keselian and Toji Rivers.
Taxonomy
.
Conservation
: IUCN:
Not
Evaluated, PC: Least Concern.
A. tabarestanensis
as it is the case for many of the other species of the genus, occurs in relatively high range distribution in very abundant populations. We therefore classified it as Least Concern.