Capoeta heratensis
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publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111677811 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17819740 |
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persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C85F87D2-FF38-FF73-28AB-FD37FBD7FB55 |
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Felipe |
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scientific name |
Capoeta heratensis |
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Capoeta heratensis View in CoL View Figure
Common name. Central Asian scraper.
Diagnosis. Distinguished from other species of Capoeta in Iranian endorheic basins by: ● usually two pairs of barbels / ○ 50–61 total lateral-line scales / ○ 17–22 gill rakers / ○ usually 8½ branched dorsal rays / ○ 8–11 scales between dorsal origin and lateral line / ○ 7–8 scales between anal origin and lateral line / ○ 7–10 scales between pelvic origin and lateral line / ○ back behind head and in front of dorsal origin not or very slightly compressed / ○ last unbranched dorsal ray strong, with many serrae. Size up to 292 mm SL.
Distribution View Figure . Hari drainage in Iran, Afghanistan, and Turkmenistan. In Morghab, Karakum Canal, and Kopetdag streams in Turkmenistan, Zeravshan, and Amu Darja in Central Asia.
Habitat. A wide range of streams and rivers, including res- ervoirs and lakes, from which it migrates into tributaries to spawn.
Biology. Lives for 8 years, probably longer, reported to mature at 2−4 years and 100 mm (probably TL). Small spawners appear to be all males. Spawns April−August at temperatures between 16 and 23°C ( Uzbekistan) on gravel bottoms. Fractional spawners, females spawn more than once in a season.
Conservation status. LC.
Remarks. Individuals with three or two barbels are common in some populations. Capoeta steindachneri is a synonym.
Further reading. Berg 1949b (morphology, distribution); Jouladeh-Roudbar et al. 2017b (morphology); Zareian et al. 2017 (phylogeny, morphology).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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