embers of the African Amphiliidae genus are long and
slim and reminds one of the "whiptail" species
of South America. The common names of this family
are "Loach catfishes" because of their flattened
like appearance. B. brieni possesses a long
caudal peduncle but it is shorter than the other species
in this genus, Belonoglanis
tenuis which is the
type species. The caudal fin is also large. These
catfish are quite difficult to keep for a length of
time and are rare in the hobby.
Belonoglanis
brieni
In their natural
habitat they prefer the marginal fringes of swift-flowing
streams so this could be taken in mind when setting
up a tank for this species.
The sub-family
Doumeinae includes the genera Andersonia
Boulenger, 1900, Belonoglanis Boulenger,
1902, Doumea Sauvage, 1879 (type genus),
Phractura Boulenger, 1900 and Trachyglanis
Boulenger, 1902. This subfamily is clearly monophyletic
and morphologically distinct from each of the other
two Amphiliidae subfamilies, being diagnosed by the
unambiguous distribution of eleven characters present
in all doumeins and absent in all other taxa represented
on the cladogram, and two characters also absent in
the latter taxa but reverted, among Doumeinae, in
genera Trachyglanis and Andersonia
respectively.
Belonoglanis
brieni-
head view
The author
of B. brieni, Max Fernand Leon Poll
(21 July 1908 in Ruisbroek – 13 March
1991 in Uccle) was a Belgian ichthyologist
who specialised in the Cichlidae. In the years
1946 and 1947 he organised an expedition to
Lake Tanganyika. He was a member of The Royal
Academies for Science and the Arts of Belgium,
professor at Université Libre de Bruxelles,
and conservator at Musée Royal du Congo
Belge in Tervuren and he was an honorary member
of the American Society of Ichthyologists
and Herpetologists.
Distrbution:
Satellite picture of Brazzaville (north bank),
Kinshasa (south bank), and the lake-like Malebo
(Stanley) Pool of the Congo River.
In the Republic of Congo (north of river) and
Democratic Republic of the Congo (south). Type
Locality: Stanley
Pool, Rivière N'Djili
Mbamu (also: M´Bamou
and Bamu) is an island in the Pool Malebo,
a large lake formed by a widening of the River
Congo. The island is territory of the Republic
of the Congo (Congo Brazzaville). Mbamu is
a demilitarized zone under the neutral regime
established in the Franco-Belgian Convention
of 1908, when these two countries exerted
colonial rule over the territories on either
side of the River Congo.
The Pool Malebo has
a surface area of 180 km2.[2] Two national
capitals are located down river: to the northwest
along the river is Brazzaville, capital of
Republic of the Congo. To the south of the
pool and river is Kinshasa, capital of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (Congo-Kinshasa),
(Wikipedia).
The Ndjili River (French:
Rivière Ndjili) is a river that flows
from the south through the capital city of
Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, where it joins the Congo River. It
separates the districts of Tshangu and Mont
Amba. The river gives its name to the Ndjili
commune and to the Ndjili International Airport.
Common
Name
None
Synonyms
None
Family
Amphiliidae
Subfamily
Doumeinae
Distribution
Africa:
N'Djili
River, Stanley Pool, Congo Dem. Rep. Congo Rep. Type
locality: Stanley Pool, Rivière N'Djili
Size
5.0cm. (2ins)
Temp.
20-25°c
(67-77°f.)
p.H.
6.5-7.2.
Characteristics
On the dorsum there is a single
row of broad bony plates from the dorsal fin to the
caudal peduncle alongside two rows of bony plates
on the sides of the belly. These plates unite on the
caudal peduncle.
Colouration
Yellowish, irregularly spotted
with brown. The fins are sprinkled with dark dots
and both the caudal and adipose fins are brown right
to the edges (Seegers, L.
2008).
Aquarium
Care & Compatibility
This genera prefer water with a bit of movement as
they are found at the margins of swift-flowing streams.
Sand substrate with algae covered rocks if possible.
Reproduction
Not recorded.
Sexual
differences
Not recorded
Diet
Algae,
vegetable foods such as peas, frozen mosquito larvae
and tablet food. In their natural habitat they feed
on bacteria that grows on plants at the sides of fast
flowing streams.
Glossary
of Terms
Adipose
fin: Fleshy finlike projection without rays,
behind the rayed dorsal fin. Barbels: Whisker-like structure on
the heads of most catfish. Caudal fin: The tail. Caudal peduncle: The narrow part
of a fish's body to which the caudal or tail fin is
attached. Clade: A group defined by at least
one shared derived character or synapomorphy inherited
from a common ancestor; a monophyletic higher taxon,
a branch on a cladogram. Dorsal fin: The primary rayed fin(s)
on top of the body. Dorsam: The upper (dorsal) surface
of the head or body. Monophyly:
The
term monophyly, or monophyletic,
derives from the two Ancient Greek words µóvoç
(mónos), meaning "alone, only, unique",
(phûlon), meaning "genus, species",
and refers to the fact that a monophyletic group includes
organisms (e.g., genera, species) consisting of all
the descendants of a unique common ancestor. Taxon: According to the Code, any
formal taxonomic unit or category of organisms (species,
genus, family, order, class, etc.). Taxa
(pl.).
Etymology
Belonoglanis:
Composed from Belon, an ichthyiologist + Greek, glanis
= a fish that can eat the bait without touching the
hook; a catfish. brieni:
ln honour
of friend and zoological colleague Paul Brien (1894-1975),
Université libre de Bruxelles (Belgium), a
member of expedition that collected type, and who
was the first to observe the behavior of this genus
in the wild (aligning their bodies along the stems
of riparian grasses, feeding on epiphytic microorganisms).
Belonoglanis
brieni has most recently been assessed for The
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in 2009. Belonoglanis
brieni is listed as Data Deficient.
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