Gagata Bleeker, 1858

Alfred W. Thomson & Lawrence M. Page, 2006, Genera of the Asian Catfish Families Sisoridae and Erethistidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)., Zootaxa 1345, pp. 1-96 : 29-30

publication ID

z01345p001

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:25EFA792-7DA4-4E0D-A69A-12591B8422DE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6253964

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/26BFA4A2-B491-CA42-D743-DF4A7E668DCB

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Gagata Bleeker, 1858
status

 

Gagata Bleeker, 1858 View in CoL View at ENA   ZBK

Fig. 10

Gagata Bleeker, 1858   ZBK : 204, 206. (Type species: Pimelodus gagata Hamilton, 1822   ZBK , by absolute tautonymy). Gender feminine.

Callomystax Guenther, 1864   ZBK : 218. (Type species: Pimelodus gagata Hamilton, 1822   ZBK , by being a replacement name. Unneeded replacement for Gagata Bleeker, 1858   ZBK . Gender masculine.

Diagnosis (based, in part, on Roberts & Ferraris 1998): Compressed head; eyes on side of head; depressed snout; small conical teeth in lower jaw; branchiostegal membranes broadly fused to isthmus; no serrations on anterior margin of pectoral spine; no welldeveloped maxillary barbel membrane; outer and inner mental barbels close together with their origins nearly parallel, in a transverse line; short nasal and maxillary barbels; palatal teeth absent.

Gagata   ZBK is distinguished from Nangra   ZBK by having the branchiostegal membranes broadly fused to the isthmus (vs. free from the isthmus), a compressed (vs. depressed) head, lateral (vs. dorsolateral) eyes, absence of palatal teeth, maxillary barbels extending only to the pectoral-fin base (vs. extending to the pelvic-fin base.) and nasal barbels shorter than the eye diameter (vs. longer, reaching at least to the eye). Gagata   ZBK is distinguished from Gogangra   ZBK , Bagarius   ZBK and Sisor   ZBK by having a compressed (vs. depressed) head, and by having the outer and inner mental barbels close together with their origins nearly parallel (vs. widely separated, origin of the inner barbels anterior in Gogangra   ZBK and Bagarius   ZBK , and origin of the inner barbels posterior in Sisor   ZBK ). Gagata   ZBK is further distinguished from Gogangra   ZBK by having the branchiostegal membranes broadly fused to the isthmus (vs. free from the isthmus). Gagata   ZBK is further distinguished from Bagarius   ZBK by having the branchiostegal membranes broadly fused to the isthmus (vs. free from the isthmus), and by having the dentition in the lower jaw consisting of only small conical teeth (vs. dentition markedly heterodont), and by lacking a well-developed maxillary barbel membrane. Gagata   ZBK is further distinguished from Sisor   ZBK by lacking serrations on the anterior margin of the pectoral spine (vs. serrations on both anterior and posterior margins of pectoral spine), no series of bony plates on the dorsum, no spine in the adipose fin, the uppermost caudal-fin ray not greatly elongated (vs. greatly elongated, more than half the length of the body), and no well-developed maxillary barbel membrane.

Description: Dorsal fin with 1 spine, 6 branched dorsal rays; pectoral fin with 1 spine, 7-10 branched rays; 6 pelvic-fin rays; 8-16 anal-fin rays (8-14 branched); 17 principal caudal rays. Head compressed; snout depressed; eyes large, lateral; teeth finely conical, in few rows, absent from upper jaw in some species. Palatal teeth absent. Maxillary barbel extending only to level of pectoral-fin base, without well-developed membrane at base. Base of maxillary barbel stiff. Branchiostegal membranes fused to isthmus; coracoid process not visible externally. Pectoral-fin spine smooth anteriorly, serrate or granulate posteriorly. Dorsal spine smooth anteriorly and posteriorly. No thoracic adhesive apparatus. Paired fins non-plaited.

Distribution: Indus drainage in Pakistan and India, east and south (including peninsular India) to the Tenasserim drainages, Myanmar (Roberts & Ferraris, 1998; Mirza et al.,1999).

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