Huigobio Fang, 1938

Jiang, Zhong-Guan & Zhang, E., 2013, Molecular evidence for taxonomic status of the gudgeon genus Huigobio Fang, 1938 (Teleostei: Cypriniformes), with a description of a new species from Guangdong Province, South China, Zootaxa 3731 (1), pp. 171-182 : 172

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3731.1.8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F4AA41E4-9CD2-4DE1-84F5-01C70C3E534E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5628189

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FD7B6E-1C13-7102-CDF2-1BC3165AFE98

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Huigobio Fang, 1938
status

 

Huigobio Fang, 1938 View in CoL

Type species. Huigobio chenhsienensis Fang, 1938

Diagnosis. Huigobio , as here delimited, belongs in the subtribe Armatogobionina, tribe Gobionini, subfamily Gobioninae . This subtribe also includes the following six genera: Abbottina , Biwia , Microphysogobio , Platysmacheilus , Pseudogobio and Saurogobio . These seven genera differ from all other genera of the Gobioninae in having thick, well-developed and usually papillated lips, and reduced gas bladders (the anterior chamber enveloped in a thick fibrous capsule, and the posterior chamber outside the capsule and smaller).

Huigobio is distinguished from all other genera of Armatogobionina by unique modifications in the lower lip ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 A–B). The lower lip is modified into two lateral lobes and a central pad. Each lateral lobe is expanded as a wing-shaped flap fully covered with papillae and contacting its counterpart posteromedially, but is not completely confluent. The central pad is small and heart-shaped, but is not longitudinally bisected. Huigobio is similar to Microphysogobio and Platysmacheilus in the shared possession of sharp horny sheaths on the cutting edges of upper and lower jaws ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 A–D), by which these three genera can be easily distinguished from all other genera of the Armatogobionina ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 E–F). Huigobio is similar to Microphysogobio , with which it shares a heart-shaped central pad of the lower lip. It is distinguished from this genus by having a lower lip with a smaller (vs. larger), heart-shaped, longitudinally non-bisected (vs. bisected) central pad, and two lateral lobes that are in contact posteromedially (vs. completely separated by the central pad) ( Fig.1 View FIGURE 1 A–C). Huigobio is similar to Platysmacheilus in the shared presence of well-developed, papillated, and wing-shaped lateral lobes of the lower lip. It is distinct from this genus in possessing a lower lip with (vs. without) a heart-shaped central pad, and two lateral lobes that are in contact posteromedially but are not confluent (vs. confluent) ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 A, B, and D).

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