The species of Ompok
have been grouped into species groups, such as the
Ompok bimaculatus group (O. bimaculatus,
O. malabaricus, O. miostomus, O.
siluroides), the
O. eugeneiatus group (O.
eugeneiatus, O.
pinnatus), the O. hypophthalmus group
(O. hypopthalmus, O.
rhabdinurus, O.
urbaini), and the O. leiacanthus
group (O. fumidus, O. jaynei, O. leiacanthus).
On the other hand, the monophyly of these species
groups is not strong enough to reassign species to
other genera. The O. eugeneiatus group is
likely to be more closely related to Kryptopterus
than the other Ompok species. According to
the recent catfish checklist, O.eugeneiatus has
been reclassified into Kryptopterus, however
O. pinnatus has not. Description:
The catfish genus Ompok La Cepède,
1803, consists of medium-sized silurid fishes found
in inland waters throughout South and Southeast
Asia. The genus is traditionally diagnosed by the
presence of a short dorsal fin with 4 rays, strongly
forked caudal fin, subcutaneous eye that is set immediately
posterior to the mouth rictus and two patches of palatal
teeth (Weber & de Beaufort, 1913). Bornbusch (1995)
showed that Ompok, as currently understood,
is probably paraphyletic. However, given the weak
support for the monophyly of his clades and the difficulty
in identifying synapomorphies to easily diagnose genera,
there has been little change in the taxonomy of this
group. The genus is recognised to be paraphyletic.
Dorsal soft rays (total):
4 - 4; Anal soft rays: 54 – 74. Two pairs of
barbels; maxillary barbels reaching pelvic fins or
anal fins; mandibulary barbels minute, about as long
as diameter of eye. Eyes small, covered by skin. Dorsal
and pelvic fins small; anal fin long; pectoral fins
well developed; vomerine teeth in 2 patches. Habitat:
Occurs in streams and rivers of all sizes with currents
ranging from sluggish to moderate. Found in quiet,
shallow (0.5-1.5 m), often muddy water, in sandy streams,
rivers and tanks. Also occurs in canals, beels
and inundated fields. Moves into freshly inundated
habitats during the flood season. Diet:
Feeds on vegetable matter, fish, crustaceans and mollusks.
Etymology: The specific name bimaculatus:
bi-, two; maculatus, spotted, presumably referring
to the blackish blotch above pectoral fin and spot
on caudal peduncle (although neither mark is mentioned
in description and the latter mark is not shown in
illustration). Remarks:
The specimens from Malaysia may be another species,
namely O.siluroides, which was a synonym
of O. bimaculatus but is now a species in
its own right. Ompok siluriodes was at one
time a synomyn for O. bimaculatus but O.
siluriodes has a marbled body pattern against
the silver of O. bimaculatus.
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