Nangra Day, 1877

Alfred W. Thomson & Lawrence M. Page, 2006, Genera of the Asian Catfish Families Sisoridae and Erethistidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)., Zootaxa 1345, pp. 1-96 : 34-36

publication ID

z01345p001

publication LSID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6253998

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3B4FE161-F747-1FAC-AEF6-761D7EC1F6B2

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Nangra Day, 1877
status

 

Nangra Day, 1877 View in CoL View at ENA   ZBK

Fig. 12

Nangra Day, 1877a   ZBK : 493. (Type species Pimelodus nangra Hamilton, 1822   ZBK , by absolute tautonymy). Gender feminine.

Diagnosis (based, in part, on Roberts & Ferraris 1998): Depressed head; dorsolateral eyes; elongated snout; small conical teeth in lower jaw; branchiostegal membranes free from isthmus; no serrations on anterior margin of pectoral spine; well-developed maxillary barbel membrane; very long nasal and maxillary barbels; palatal teeth present.

Nangra   ZBK is distinguished from all sisorids by having maxillary barbels that extend beyond the pectoral-fin base (vs. extending no further than the pectoral-fin base), by having very long nasal barbels (barbel length much greater than the eye diameter, often as long as the head vs. length less than the eye diameter), and by having palatal teeth. Nangra   ZBK is further distinguished from Gagata   ZBK by having the branchiostegal membranes free from the isthmus (vs. broadly fused to the isthmus), depressed (vs. compressed) head, and by having a well-developed maxillary barbel membrane. Nangra   ZBK is further distinguished from Gogangra   ZBK by a well-developed maxillary barbel membrane and no (vs. small) serrations on the anterior margin of the pectoral spine. Nangra   ZBK is further distinguished from Bagarius   ZBK by having only small conical teeth in the lower jaw (vs. teeth of the lower jaw markedly heterodont, consisting of two or three outer rows of relatively numerous, close-set conical teeth, and one or two inner rows of less numerous, widely separated, and much larger conical teeth). Nangra   ZBK is further distinguished from Sisor   ZBK by lacking serrations on the anterior margin of the pectoral-fin spine (vs. serrations present on both anterior and posterior margins of pectoral-fin spine), by having branchiostegal membranes free from the isthmus (vs. broadly fused to the isthmus), no series of bony plates on the dorsum, the uppermost caudal-fin ray not greatly elongated (vs. greatly elongated, more than half the length of the body), and no spine in the adipose fin.

Description: Dorsal fin with 1 spine, 6-9 branched dorsal rays; pectoral fin with 1 spine, 7-9 branched fin ray; 6 pelvic-fin rays; 7-11 branched anal-fin rays. Head depressed; snout elongate. Eyes small, dorsolateral. Palatal teeth present. Maxillary barbel extending at least to pectoral spine tip and usually beyond pelvic fins, with well-developed membrane, stiff base. Coracoid process not visible externally; pectoral-fin spine smooth anteriorly, serrate posteriorly. Dorsal spine smooth anteriorly and posteriorly. No thoracic adhesive apparatus. Paired fins non-plaited.

Distribution: Indus, Ganges, Meghna and Bramhputra drainages, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Nepal (Roberts & Ferraris, 1998).

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