Botia udomritthiruji, Ng, Heok Hee, 2007

Ng, Heok Hee, 2007, Botia udomritthiruji, a new species of botiid loach from southern Myanmar (Teleostei: Botiidae), Zootaxa 1608, pp. 41-49 : 42-44

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.178863

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5690757

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F587E7-4D17-6B13-99CE-7165FF58F925

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Botia udomritthiruji
status

sp. nov.

Botia udomritthiruji View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs. 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 )

Type material. Holotype. UMMZ 248184, 107.0 mm SL; Myanmar: Taninthayi division, Tenasserim River drainage in the vicinity of Same, 13°36'N 99°2'E; K. Jarutanin, 29 March 2007.

Paratypes. UMMZ 248185 (2), 58.9–81.9 mm SL; ZRC 50984 (14), 55.2–114.6 mm SL; data as for holotype. NRM 56791 (3), 68.8–97.5 mm SL; locality as for holotype; K. Jarutanin, February 1993.

Diagnosis. Botia udomritthiruji can be distinguished from congeners by its color pattern, which includes five dark vertical bars on the body, with the central portion of these bars paler than its edges; with increasing age, the edges of these bars become more irregular and darker, and irregular dark spots on the pale interspaces begin to form, sometimes fusing with the edges of the vertical bars. It can be further distinguished from congeners in having a unique combination of: body depth 23.4–27.7% SL (vs. 18.9–22.3 in B. almorhae and 19.7–24.0 in B. kubotai ), caudal peduncle depth 15.9–18.7% SL (vs. 11.1–14.5 in B. dario ), and 12 dorsal-fin rays (vs. 13–14 in B. kubotai ).

Description. Morphometric values as given in Table 1 View TABLE 1 . Overall morphology as in Fig.1 View FIGURE 1 . Head and body strongly compressed. Head in lateral view acutely triangular, with gently convex dorsal and ventral margins. Eye ovoid, horizontal axis longest; located on dorsal half of head. Gill openings restricted, extending from just below posttemporal to just anterior to base of first pectoral-fin ray. Slit for erectile suborbital spine extending from vertical through one third distance between posterior margin of posterior nares and anterior margin of orbit to below vertical through posterior margin of orbit. Suborbital spine (part of modified lateral ethmoid) bifid and moderately curved, with long main process and shorter dorsocaudal process; main process extending to vertical through posterior orbital margin; both processes attached to side of head by flap of skin. Mouth horseshoe-shaped, rictus at vertical through anterior margin of anterior nares. Upper and lower lips thick, with numerous plicae. Upper lip with median shallow notch accommodating symphysis of lower lip. Lower lip interrupted at symphysis, with a pair of mental lobes located on either side. Mental lobes with pair of fleshy papillae anteriorly. Six pairs of barbels: two pairs of rostral, one pair of maxillary and one pair of mandibular barbels. Rostral and maxillary barbels of approximately equal length and longer than eye diameter; mandibular barbels shorter, about three-quarters of eye diameter.

Body deepest at origin of first dorsal-fin ray. Scales very small, partially overlapping and deeply embedded. Dorsal profile rising gently from tip of snout to origin of dorsal fin and sloping gently ventrally from origin of dorsal fin to end of caudal peduncle. Ventral profile straight or gently convex to pelvic-fin base, then straight or gently concave to anal-fin base and sloping dorsally to end of caudal peduncle. Dorsal-fin origin located slightly in front of pelvic-fin origin, slightly behind midpoint of body (considered in SL); dorsal fin with iii,9 (20) rays. Pectoral fin with ii,10 (2) or ii,11* (18) rays, reaching to vertical through base of first dorsal-fin ray. Pelvic fin with ii,6 (20) rays, and reaching beyond anus but not to base of first anal-fin ray. Origin of anal fin approximately at vertical through midway between base of last dorsal-fin ray and caudal-fin base; anal fin with iii,5 (1) or iii,6* (19) rays. Caudal fin forked, with i,9,8,i (20) rays; lower lobe slightly broader and rounder than upper lobe.

Coloration. Base color of all preserved material a light yellowish brown, darkening in time to light brown. In smallest available specimens (ca. 50–80 mm SL), body with a series of five dark vertical bars: first at nape, second approximately midway between nape and base of first dorsal-fin ray, third below dorsal-fin base, fourth approximately midway between base of last dorsal-fin ray and caudal-fin base, and last at caudalfin base. Dark bars frequently with dark margins and pale central region, causing each bar to appear as double bar. Interspaces approximately as wide as dark bars. Head with vertical mark in shape of irregular inverted Y extending over orbit and with dark stripe on dorsal surface extending from just anterior to orbit to tip of snout ( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 a–b).

In specimens about 80–100 mm SL, sides of vertical dark bars on body becoming more wavy, few faint dark blotches (usually as vertical series of ovoid patches) appearing on interspaces. Dark head markings becoming more extensive, giving appearance of irregular pale lines on head ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 c).

In specimens above 100 mm SL, dark markings on interspaces more prominent, beginning to fuse with margins of vertical bars. Pale interspaces between dark head markings becoming more diffuse and irregular in outline ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 d).

Dorsal fin with dark broad basal bar, usually continuing from third vertical bar on body, and dark subdistal bar; subdistal bar frequently irregular and broken up into series of irregular blotches, particularly in some specimens above 100 mm SL. Pectoral fins with two or three irregular dark transverse bands on dorsal surface. Pelvic fins with dark sub-basal spot on dorsal surfaces of branched rays; spot sometimes absent in specimens under 80 mm SL. Anal fin with dark transverse sub-basal band, and in some specimens above 100 mm SL dark subdistal spot on second and third branched anal-fin rays; sub-basal band absent in specimens under 70 mm SL. Caudal fin with two to four dark wavy transverse bands on each lobe, anteriormost band continuous across entire fin.

Live coloration similar to preserved coloration, but may be more coppery in some individuals that show decreased contrast between vertical bars and base color ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 a) and brown in others ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 b). Lips and barbels suffused with strong red hue in some individuals.

Distribution. Botia udomritthiruji is known only from the Tenasserim River drainage ( Fig. 4). This represents the first record of the genus from the Tenasserim River drainage, although its presence there is to be expected given that it has been previously recorded in adjacent river drainages.

Etymology. This species is named in appreciation after Kamphol Udomritthiruj, who provided the author with not only the type material and associated data for this species, but also material and data for other projects.

TABLE 1. Morphometric data for Botia udomritthiruji (n = 20).

  Holotype UMMZ 248184 Range Mean ±SD
Standard length (mm) 107.0 55.2–114.6  
%SL      
Head length 28.2 27.5–32.2 29.5±1.36
Predorsal length 52.4 51.4–55.8 53.4±1.41
Prepelvic length 53.4 53.1–57.7 55.0±1.37
Preanal length 77.7 74.8–79.7 78.0±1.37
Body depth 24.8 23.4–27.7 25.6±1.36
Caudal peduncle depth 15.9 15.9–18.7 17.2±0.80
Caudal peduncle length 15.3 15.3–19.2 17.0±1.21
Body width 15 13.6–16.4 14.6±0.76
%HL      
Snout length 60.3 50.6–61.9 55.2±3.18
Interorbital distance 29.5 27.6–33.7 29.9±2.08
Eye diameter 14.9 14.1–21.5 16.8±2.28
UMMZ

University of Michigan, Museum of Zoology

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

NRM

Swedish Museum of Natural History - Zoological Collections

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Cypriniformes

Family

Cobitidae

Genus

Botia

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