Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

Malabar snakehead

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Malabar snakehead
Malabar snakehead, Channa diplogramma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Anabantiformes
Family: Channidae
Genus: Channa
Species:
C. diplogramma
Binomial name
Channa diplogramma
(F. Day, 1865)

The Malabar snakehead (Channa diplogramma) is a vulnerable species of snakehead from fresh water in the Western Ghats in India. Until 2011, its scientific name was usually considered to be a synonym of C. micropeltes, the giant snakehead.[2]

Taxonomy

[edit]

Sir Francis Day described Ophiocephalus diplogramma in 1865 based on one juvenile specimen (42 mm in length) collected near the mouth of the Cochin River in the port city of Cochin (southwestern India) and called it Malabar snakehead.[3] The colour pattern of this juvenile matched with that of juveniles of another species of snakehead, O. micropeltes, originally described by Cuvier and Valenciennes from Java, Indonesia.[4] This possibly led Day to synonymise C. diplogramma with C. micropeltes in 1878.[5] The close similarity, rarity of adult specimens in museum collections, and because no taxonomist had studied this snakehead since its description, resulted in the subsequent acceptance of the synonymy by ichthyologists.[2] In 2011, C. diplogramma was shown to be a valid species 134 years after it was synonymised, making it an endemic species of peninsular India.[2]

Biology

[edit]

C. diplogramma shows multiple colour phases during its life history, which makes local fishers believe that they are different species. The different specimens are also known by different vernacular names (pulivaka, karivaka, manalvaka, and charalvaka). All these specimen in different colour phases occur sympatrically and use the same ecological habitats.

Distribution

[edit]

The Malabar snakehead is endemic to the southern Western Ghats of peninsular India. It is known from the Meenachil, Manimala, Pampa, Achenkovil and Kallada Rivers (and their reservoirs) in Kerala, as well as the Chittar and Tambaraparani Rivers (and their reservoirs) in Tamil Nadu.

Identification

[edit]

The Malabar snakehead differs from all other species in the genus by its high number of lateral line scales (103–105 vs. 36–91). It further differs from all other Channa species, except C. bankanensis, C. lucius, C. micropeltes, and C. pleurophthalma, by the presence of gular scales, a patch of scales between the anterior tips of the lower jaws, visible in ventral view. C. diplogramma differs from C. bankanensis, C. lucius, and C. pleurophtalma by having a very different color pattern, and from its sister species C. micropeltes by a combination of characteristics, viz. number of caudal fin rays, lateral line scales, scales below lateral line; total vertebrae, pre-anal length, and body depth.

Conservation status

[edit]

The Malabar snakehead is listed as a vulnerable species in the IUCN Red List in view of its restricted distribution, and threats including fishing, habitat loss, and pollution.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Abraham, R. (2011). "Channa diplogramma". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2011: e.T196095A8994895. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2011-1.RLTS.T196095A8994895.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Benziger A, Philip S, Raghavan R, Anvar Ali PH, Sukumaran M, et al. (2011) Unraveling a 146 Years Old Taxonomic Puzzle: Validation of Malabar Snakehead, Species-Status and Its Relevance for Channid Systematics and Evolution. PLoS ONE 6(6): e21272. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0021272
  3. ^ Day F (1865) On the fishes of Cochin, on the Malabar coast of India. Part I. Acanthopterygii. Proceedings of the General Meetings for Scientific Business of the Zoological Society of London 1865(pt 1): 2–40. Continues as Part II, 286–318.
  4. ^ Cuvier G, Valenciennes A (1831) Histoire naturelle des poissons, Vol.7. Levrault, Paris-Strasbourg.
  5. ^ Day F (1878) Fishes of India; being a natural history of the fishes known to inhabit the seas and freshwaters of India, Burma and Ceylon.