Malihkaia, Kottelat, 2017

Kottelat, Maurice, 2017, A new genus and three new species of nemacheilid loaches from northern Irrawaddy drainage, Myanmar (Teleostei: Cypriniformes), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 65, pp. 80-99 : 81-84

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4504495

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:70097B8F-3EF2-4740-97D4-AD2357234011

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4F3A40F7-1C83-4FBC-A91E-292BF09CD49B

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:4F3A40F7-1C83-4FBC-A91E-292BF09CD49B

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Malihkaia
status

gen. nov.

Malihkaia View in CoL , new genus

Type species. Malihkaia aligera View in CoL , new species ( Figs. 1–2 View Fig View Fig ).

Diagnosis. Malihkaia is distinguished from all other genera of nemacheilids by the unique morphology of the lips and the unique pectoral fin sexual dimorphism. Lips thick, with numerous, closely set, deep furrows ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). Upper lip with a small median notch, with transverse furrows on its whole length, edge crenulated. Lower lip with a median interruption; with transverse furrows on its whole length, edge crenulated.

In the male, the pectoral fin is strongly falcate ( Fig. 2 View Fig ). The unbranched ray is flexible and shaped as in other species of Nemacheilidae . The first branched ray is rigid, arched and curled upwards ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). It is about 5 times wider than the other branched rays. It is flattened dorso-ventrally and very elongate, reaching beyond pelvic-fin base. It is first branched at about midlength. The posterior main branch is thicker than the anterior main branch; it is branched again twice, the third branching about at distal one-sixth of the ray. The anterior branch is branched again only once, in a position intermediate to that of branching points 2 and 3 of posterior main branch. There is no membrane between all the branches and sub-branches, but there is a membrane around the tip of the ray.

The second and third branched rays are very slender, branched only at their distal third, the anterior branch is thicker than the posterior one and it is branched again once; the posterior branch has no sub-branches. The membrane between the branches is very narrow. The spaces and relative ‘depth’ of the branching increase regularly in the following rays. The fourth and following branched rays have two branches that are each branched once. There is some variation in the branching apparently related to size and small injuries; the above is based on intact fins.

The lower surface of the unbranched ray and the unbranched part of first branched ray and the membrane between the three first rays are covered by an unculiferous pad ( Conway et al., 2012), thickest under the first branched ray. There are also pads under the membranes between the other rays, but less developed. There also are granulations (unculi?) on the dorsal surface of the rays and thickened tissue on the membranes.

In females, the pectoral fin is rounded; there are unculiferous pads under the rays, thickest under the unbranched and first branched ones, decreasing in extant and thickness posteriorly. The unbranched ray is thicker than the following rays and rigid; dorsally, the membrane between the first two rays is thickened. The first branched ray is thickened but flexible, round in cross-section, thicker than the following rays; the anterior branch is unbranched. The posterior branch is branched once, the anterior sub-branch is unbranched and the posterior one branched again. In the second branched ray, the anterior branch is unbranched and the posterior branch is branched again. The remaining rays are all branched twice as in other nemacheilids. There is some little variation in the branching, related with small injuries and regrowth; the above is based on one intact fin on each female.

In both sexes, in both pelvic and pectoral fins, the anterior edge of the unbranched ray has a thick tissue cover. In both sexes, the pelvic fin has thickened tissue on membranes between the unbranched ray and branched rays 1–3, dorsally and ventrally, also covering part of these rays ventrally.

Additional characters useful to distinguish the genus are: processus dentiformis present; suborbital flap present in males; 8½ branched dorsal-fin rays; 9+8 branched caudal-fin rays; axillary pelvic lobe present; anus situated about 1.5–2 eye diameter in front of anal fin; body entirely scaled; lateral line complete; air bladder without posterior chamber; body with 9–12 bars extending from dorsal midline to level of pectoral fin, bars of quite regular width and shape in front of dorsal fin, less regular posteriorly, much wider than interspaces; and black mark at caudal-fin base made of a more or less squarish blotch in middle of base, a more or less triangular blotch over dorsal procurrent rays, fainter pigments over base of uppermost and lowermost 4–6 principal rays of caudal fin.

Etymology. Named for Mali Hka River, where the type species was discovered. Gender feminine.

Remarks. The deeply furrowed lower lip of Malihkaia aligera is unique in South and Southeast Asian Nemacheilidae . Acanthocobitis (including Paracanthocobitis , see Kottelat, 2012b: 74, 2013: 198) has papillated lips ( Kottelat, 1990, 2012a). On the upper lip, the papillae are organised in several rows; on the lower lip there is a broad median interruption and, on each side, a widened, strongly papillated pad, covered by papillae. Species of Acanthocobitis also have a very different colour pattern, made of obliquely organised bars, usually of irregular shape and organisation. All species of Acanthocobitis have a small black spot (sometime ocellated) at the upper extremity of the base of the caudal fin. Finally, species of Acanthocobitis have a longer dorsal fin, with 9–18½ branched rays.

In Nemacheilidae , the deeply furrowed lips are otherwise known only in some species of Labiatophysa , Triplophysa and Tarimichthys , all endemic to the Tibetan plateau, the Tarim and adjacent endorheic basins in China, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, and adjacent waters. These genera are distinguished, among others, by the absence of scales (most species), males with densely set unculi on the side of the head below the eye and on the dorsal surface of anterior pectoral-fin rays ( Prokofiev, 2004, 2010).

Cobitiforms have developed a great variety of sexual dimorphism, but most of it associated with the pectoral fins and involving thickening and modification of rays (see, e.g., Šlechtová et al., 2008 for sexual dimorphism in Cobitis and related genera; Kottelat & Lim, 1992 for Lepidocephalichthys ; Kottelat & Tan, 2008 for Kottelatlimia and Acantopsis ; Kottelat, 1990 for Indochinese Nemacheilidae ; Bohlen & Šlechtová, 2011 for Pteronemacheilus ); sexual dimorphism may also involve, for example, thickening of parts of the body (e.g., in Sabanejewia, Kottelat & Freyhof, 2007 ) or vertical torsion of the caudal peduncle (in Microcobitis ; pers. obs., unpubl.). The modified pectoral fin of male M. aligera seems unique in Nemacheilidae but is very reminiscent of what is observed in some Cobitidae , especially species of Acantopsis . In Acantopsis , the branches of the first branched ray are in contact and there is no membrane between them and the ray is covered by a dense layer of unculi (pers. obs.; Kottelat & Tan, 2008). In Kottelatlimia , the first branched ray is branched only at the tip and may appear as an unbranched ray ( Kottelat & Tan, 2008). A curled pectoral fin in males is observed in Cobitidae in Acantopsis and Pangio (e.g., Kottelat & Tan, 2008; Kottelat & Lim, 1993) but has not been reported in Nemacheilidae before.

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