Freshwater Fishes of
China in Coloured Illustrations (1)
ScotCat
Sources:
Other
Sources:
Relevant
Information:
Description:
Body brown to blackish; pale midlateral stripe present
but may not always be distinct; pale stripe along
dorsal mid-line (not always distinct). Head and body
rugose, covered by relatively large tubercles, usually
distinct with naked eye, of very heterogeneous sizes.
Anal usually without black mark restricted to base.
Glyptothorax is distinguished from all other
sisorid genera by having an adhesive apparatus on
the thorax with with grooves parallel or oblique to
the longitudinal axis of the body (vs. thoracic adhesive
grooves transverse to the longitudinal axis of the
body in Pseudecheneis, and thoracic adhesive
apparatus absent in all other genera). Remarks:
G. interspinalum has been assessed as Near
Threatened with an inferred population decline of
20-29% in the past ten years, as a result of heavy
pollution in the Red River.
Common
Name:
None
Synonyms:
Glyptosternon interspinalum,
Glyptothorax merus
Family:
Sisoridae
Distribution:
Asia:
Red River drainage, Vietnam and China. Type
locality: Creeks in N. Vietnam.
Size:
10.0cm. (4ins)
Temp:
18-23°c (63-73°f.)
p.H.
6.0-7.0.
Reference:
Alfred W. Thomson &
Lawrence M. Page; 30 October 2006. Genera
of the Asian Catfish Families Sisoridae and Erethistidae
(Teleostei: Siluriformes) (Zootaxa 1345) Froese, R. and D. Pauly. Editors.
2011. FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication.
www.fishbase.org, version. Jenkins, A., Kullander,
F.F. & Tan, H.H.
2009. Glyptothorax interspinalum. In: IUCN 2012. IUCN
Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2012.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>
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