Friday, January 13, 2012

[Ichthyology • 2009] Danionella priapus • a new species of miniature cyprinid fish (Teleostei: Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae) from West Bengal, India


Abstract
Danionella priapus, a new species of sexually dimorphic miniature cyprinid from the Brahmaputra drainage in India, is distinguished from the other three species in the genus by the presence in adult males of a conical projection of the genital papilla situated between funnel-shaped pelvic fins, the number of anal- and pectoral-fin rays, and the position of insertion of the last anal-fin pterygiophore. It differs further from D. translucida and D. mirifica in details of the colour pattern, from D. dracula and D. mirifica in number of procurrent caudal-fin rays, from D. translucida in number of vertebrae and from D. dracula in several skeletal characters. Like the other species in the genus, D. priapus shows a developmentally truncated skeleton that is associated with several evolutionary morphological novelties. The present distribution of the Danionella species may be the result of a vicariance event in the early Miocene, when the tectonicuplift of eastern Tibet and the Indo-Burman ranges lead to the interruption of the palaeo-connection between the Tsangpo (Brahmaputra) and the upper Irrawaddy Rivers.

Key words: miniature fishes, developmental truncation, evolutionary novelty, vicariance


Dorsal and ventral view of the colour pattern of Danionella priapus head and anterior body. Holotype: BMNH 2009.9.9.1, male, 14.4mm SL. (Images: Ralf Britz, Natural History Museum)


Britz, R. 2009. Danionella priapus, a new species of miniature cyprinid fish from West Bengal, India (Teleostei: Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae). Zootaxa, 2277: 53–60.: http://mapress.com/zootaxa/2009/f/z02277p060f.pdf