Oryzias uwai, ROBERTS, 1998

Parenti, Lynne R., 2008, A phylogenetic analysis and taxonomic revision of ricefishes, Oryzias and relatives (Beloniformes, Adrianichthyidae), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 154 (3), pp. 494-610 : 591-592

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00417.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10546281

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/445187F2-FFAE-0F7F-FED3-FE7DFE4FC1EE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Oryzias uwai
status

 

ORYZIAS UWAI ROBERTS, 1998 View in CoL

UWA’ s MEDAKA

FIGURES 16A View Figure 16 , 20B View Figure 20 , 58 View Figure 58

Oryzias minutillus .- Uwa et al., 1988: 332–339 [in part, Rangoon; distribution, comparison with O. minutillus and specimens of O. latipes referred here to O. sinensis ].

Oryzias uwai Roberts, 1998: 218–219 View in CoL , fig. 2c [type locality: Myanmar: Rangoon, Irrawaddy and Sittang basins].

Differential diagnosis: Oryzias uwai is a miniature ricefish (largest specimen known is just 16.1 mm SL), hypothesized to be closely related to Oryzias minutillus and O. setnai with which it shares i,3/4,i rather than i,4/5,i principal caudal-fin rays, a medial extension of the ethmoid cartilage, and anterior anal-fin rays elongate, set off from the rest of the fin, and from which it differs by having larger pelvic fins, with six rather than five rays in most specimens. Oryzias uwai and O. setnai share an interrupted, horizontal dark brown bar that runs from the eye to the lower jaw; a mesethmoid that is uniquely subrectangular, rather than round or oval; and a first epibranchial that is cartilaginous, not ossified. Four miniatures, O. uwai , O. pectoralis , O. setnai and O. minutillus , have a pigmented anal or urogenital region and an elongate, rounded caudal fin, a character also of O. hubbsi and O. mekongensis .

Description: Miniature, maximum size of specimens examined 16.1 mm SL. Body compressed laterally, slender, body depth 21–24 [24]. No pronounced abdominal concavity between pelvic fins and anal fin. Mouth terminal, lower jaw projecting slightly beyond upper jaw. Dorsal body profile relatively straight from head to dorsal-fin origin; ventral body profile slightly convex from head to anal-fin origin. Dorsal surface of head slightly convex just anterior to orbits. Head length 29–30 [30]; snout length 9–10 [10]; eye moderate to large, 8–10 [10], orbits meet dorsal surface of head. Basal portion of dorsal fin projects slightly beyond primary body profile. Scales relatively large, cycloid; 26–27 [27] in a lateral series (scale count approximate). Dorsal and pectoral fins elongate, anal fin slightly rounded; anal-fin rays without bony contact organs. Medialmost pelvic-fin ray connected to body via a membrane along its proximal half; pelvic fins large, extend to or beyond anal fin origin in females. Caudal fin with elongate middle rays. Male with short tubular urogenital papilla; female with bilobed urogenital papilla.

Premaxilla short and broad with barely distinct ascending process; premaxilla and dentary with a single irregular row of caniniform teeth; no large canine teeth on lateral ramus of the premaxilla or dentary of males. No preethmoid cartilage; mesethmoid cartilaginous or weakly ossified, when ossified, mesethmoid small and suboval; ethmoid cartilage rectangular with anterior projection. No flanges on the ventral surface of the palatine and the quadrate. Dorsal ramus of hyomandibula not distinctly bifid, single cartilage articulates with sphenotic and pterotic. Lacrimal sensory canal carried in open bony groove. First pleural rib on parapophysis of second vertebra; first epipleural bone attaches to second vertebra; lateral process of pelvic bone in close association with third or fourth pleural rib. Caudal skeleton with two epural bones; one ventral accessory bone. Anteriormost dorsal and ventral procurrent rays hooked at base. Fifth ceratobranchial toothplate triangular, with teeth in irregular rows anteriorly, followed by two discrete rows of unicuspid teeth, and no incomplete posterior row. Basihyal bone triangular, basihyal cartilage extremely elongate and rectangular. Epibranchial 1 cartilaginous; epibranchial 2 notably smaller than the other epibranchial elements.

Dorsal-fin rays 6–7. Anal-fin rays 18–21. Pelvic-fin rays 6. Pectoral-fin rays 7–8. Principal caudal-fin rays i,3/4,i. Procurrent fin-rays, dorsal 4, ventral 5. Vertebrae 25–28 (9–10 + 16–18). Branchiostegal rays 4.

Cytogenetic data: Karyotype data for O. minutillus from Thailand were reported by Uwa et al. (1988). Although they referred the now type specimens of O. uwai (then all CAS-SU 40208) to O. minutillus , they had no fresh Myanmar specimens from which karyotype data could be obtained.

Colour in life: Unknown.

Colour in alcohol: Ground colour pale straw. A diffuse row of melanophores from the dorsal surface of the head to the dorsal-fin origin, a midlateral black line from the head to base of the caudal fin, continues faintly onto the caudal fin on the membrane just dorsal and ventral to the first ray above and below the midline, respectively. An interrupted, horizontal dark brown stripe from the eye to the tip of the lower jaw, faded or indistinct in larger specimens. A faint black line along the anal-fin base. Dorsal and anal fin interradial membranes with faint scattered melanophores or hyaline. Perianal region with dense brown to black spot. Pectoral and pelvic fins hyaline. Body with small melanophores.

Distribution and habitat: Irrawaddy, Rangoon and Sittang basins, Myanmar.

Material examined: 118 specimens (8.6–16.1 mm SL). Holotype. MYANMAR. Rangoon: CAS-SU 40208 View Materials , holotype (male, 16.1 mm), A. W. Herre, xi.1940.

Paratypes. MYANMAR. Rangoon: CAS-SU 69787 View Materials 19 (12.2–15.9 mm), collected with the holotype ; Sittang R. drainage, Dayame Chaung, 1.5 km. N of Daik-U., T. R. Roberts , 9.iii.1985 ; Pegu Div., CAS 60739, 6 View Materials (12.4–13.8 mm) ; Mandalay rice paddies, T. R. Roberts, 20–24.iv.1993, CAS 92309, 20 View Materials (8.6–13.5 mm, 7 of which, 9.3–11.6 mm, have been cleared and stained solely with alizarin) ; Sittang basin, backwater of Bai Nar Chaung near Dabeinzu, K. E. Witte, 4.iv.1996, CAS 92310, 72 View Materials (8.8–15.9 mm, 10 of which, 10.2– 14.8 mm, have been cleared and stained solely with alizarin, 4 of which, 12–13.5 mm, have been cleared and counterstained) .

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Beloniformes

Family

Adrianichthyidae

Genus

Oryzias

Loc

Oryzias uwai

Parenti, Lynne R. 2008
2008
Loc

Oryzias uwai

Roberts TR 1998: 219
1998
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF