Beaufortia zebroida ( Fang 1930 ), 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zse.100.124370 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:59836C29-33F6-40F1-A9EC-16D17086D820 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12701253 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A1E16FB4-5F61-5356-A6DB-C96DA860BCA1 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Beaufortia zebroida ( Fang 1930 ) |
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Beaufortia zebroida ( Fang 1930)
Fig. 15 View Figure 15
Gastromyzon pingi zebroidus Fang, 1930: 35 (original description: Donggui River, Longzhou County, Guangxi). View in CoL
Beaufortia zebroidus View in CoL : Hora (1932): 319.
Gastromyzon pingi zebroidus View in CoL : Nichols (1943): 231.
Beaufortia pingi View in CoL : Nguyen and Nguyen (2005): 282–283
Beaufortia fasciolata Nguyen & Nguyen, 2005: 588–590. View in CoL
Beaufortia multiocellata Nguyen & Nguyen, 2005: 590–592. View in CoL
Beaufortia triocellata Nguyen & Nguyen, 2005: 592–594. View in CoL
Beaufortia zebroida : Kottelat (2012): 59–60.
Comparative materials.
MMNHN 1544, one specimen, holotype, not found yet, refers to the original description. SHOU 20240111301-317, 33.24–49.96 mm SL, 17 specimens from Guangnan County, Xichou County, Malipo County, Funing County, Yunnan, and Napo County, Guangxi, SHOU 20240111301-317, 33.24–49.96 mm SL, were collected by Lao Xing and Lin Yang from December 2021 to January 2024.
Diagnosis.
B. zebroida shares the typical characteristics with members of the B. pingi species group, with distinct vertical stripes on lateral body and a pinnate-type lower lip (vs. lacking prominent vertical stripes and having a dicot-type lower lip in other congeneric species apart from this group) (see Figs 6 B View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 , Table 2 View Table 2 ). B. zebroida can be clearly distinguished from B. granulopinna sp. nov. by the absence of prominent tubercles on the pectoral fin rays (vs. well-developed tubercles present on anterior 6–9 rays of pectoral fins); vertical stripes slender, narrower than inter-spacing, present consistently at all growth stages (vs. vertical stripes typically wider than inter-spacing, with a certain proportion (54.76 %) of adults exhibiting blurred or vanished mid-section stripes). B. zebroida can be clearly distinguished from B. viridis sp. nov. by the vertical stripes present uneven in width and length, typically narrower than inter-spacing, sometimes reduced to dots (vs. stripes of consistent length, width, and inter-spacing); body brown yellow to golden in dorsal profile (vs. dark cyan to green). B. zebroida can be clearly distinguished from B. pingi by the stable presence of vertical stripes at all growth stages (vs. a large proportion (94.00 %) of adults with blurred or vanished vertical stripes at mid-section of lateral body) and body brown yellow to golden in dorsal profile (vs. dark brown to green).
Redescription.
Dorsal iii- 7; anal ii- 3–4 (3.98 ± 0.14); pectoral i- 20–23 (21.5 ± 0.73); pelvic i- 16–19 (17.53 ± 0.86). Lateral-line canal pores and scales: 70–84 (75.12 ± 3.55).
Morphometric measurements for the specimens examined are given in Table 3 View Table 3 . See Fig. 15 View Figure 15 for lateral, dorsal, and ventral views of the body.
Body closely resembles B. viridis sp. nov. in general shape and structure, but significantly different in stripes pattern and coloration.
Coloration in preservation.
Preserved specimens from sub-adult to adult stage, body brown yellow to grey, white ventrally. Head with black spots or vermiculation dorsally, 2–5 larger black blotches along mid-dorsal body anterior to dorsal fin. Sides with 8–15 vertical dark stripes, varying greatly in length, which sometimes appearing as dots, stripe width narrower than inter-spacing, present at all growth stages. Paired fin margins hyaline or pale white, inner edges with continuous or dotted black arc. Dorsal fin hyaline, with black stripes, one black spot on the root before the second branched ray.
Coloration in live.
In life, body brown yellow to golden in dorsal profile. Mature individuals with a more vivid golden coloration, and fin membranes pale yellow.
Individual variation.
Among 17 specimens, one ( SHOU 20240111307) had three branched anal fin rays.
Ethology.
Inhabits shallow streams with rapid currents and smooth pebble substrates that adhere to crevices between stones. Feeds on algae and small invertebrates and consumes mucus from fresh fish carcasses. Exhibits territorial behavior.
Distribution.
Exclusively in small tributaries on the north bank of the mid-lower Red River system and the upper Shuikou River to Zuo River basin (upper Pearl River system), from Maguan County, Wenshan Zhuang, and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan, to Longzhou County, Guangxi, near the China-Vietnam border, extending into northeastern Vietnam (see Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ).
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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Genus |
Beaufortia zebroida ( Fang 1930 )
Chen, Jing-Chen, Li, Jia-Jia, Tang, Wen-Qiao, Pu, Xin-Rui & Lei, Hao-Tian 2024 |
Beaufortia zebroida
Kottelat M 2012: 59 |
Beaufortia pingi
Nguyen HD & Nguyen VH 2005: 282 |
Beaufortia fasciolata
Nguyen HD & Nguyen VH 2005: 590 |
Beaufortia multiocellata
Nguyen HD & Nguyen VH 2005: 592 |
Beaufortia triocellata
Nguyen HD & Nguyen VH 2005: 594 |
Gastromyzon pingi zebroidus
Nichols JT 1943: 231 |
Beaufortia zebroidus
Hora SL 1932: 319 |
Gastromyzon pingi zebroidus
Fang PW 1930: 35 |