Bedotia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bedotia | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bedotia madagascariensis
|
||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Species | ||||||||||||
B. albomarginata |
Bedotia is a genus of the family Bedotiidae of fishes endemic to Madagascar.
Contents |
[edit] Taxonomy
This genus is monophyletic.[3] Little is known regarding phylogenetic interrelationships of the numerous populations of Bedotia of eastern Madagascar, and the genus is in need of systematic revision. One author synonymized B. longianalis and B. tricolor with B. geayi with no justification. It is apparent that several species of Bedotia exist, although many of these are new and await description, whereas the taxonomic status of many nominal species remains uncertain.[2]
A 2004 study supported three major, more or less geographically distinct, clades of Bedotia, one comprising species with distributions ranging from mid- to southeastern Madagascar (B. madagascariensis, B. geayi, and B. tricolor, plus four undescribed species), another including species restricted to eastern drainages north of the Masoala Peninsula (B. marojejy, plus four undescribed species), and a third comprising taxa with distributions extending from the Masoala Peninsula southward to the Ivoloina River (B. longianalis and B. masoala, plus three undescribed species).[4] These three clades of Bedotia are not readily separated based on coloration or pigmentation pattern.
[edit] Description
Bedotia species are all under 10 centimetres (4 in) SL, extremely colorful, elongate, and somewhat laterally compressed atherinoid fishes that exhibit varying degrees of sexual dimorphism.[2] Except for coloration and pigmentation, Bedotia are morphologically conservative fishes.[4] All Bedotia are sexually dimorphic, with males exhibiting larger adult size, enhanced coloration and pigmentation, as well as pronounced development of the unpaired fins.[4]
[edit] Ecology
Bedotia is exclusively freshwater, and members are found in small to medium-sized forested rivers and streams, and to a lesser degree in swamps and marshes, along the eastern slope of Madagascar.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Loiselle, Paul V.; Rodriguez, Damaris (2007). "A new species of Bedotia (Teleostei: Atherinomorpha: Bedotiidae) from the Rianila drainage of Eastern Madagascar, with redescriptions of Bedotia madagascariensis and Bedotia geayi" (PDF). Zootaxa 1520: 1–18.
- ^ a b c d Sparks, John S. (2001). "Bedotia masoala: A New Species of Atherinoid Rainbowfish (Teleostei: Bedotiidae) from the Masoala Peninsula, Northeastern Madagascar". Copeia 2001 (2): 482–489. doi: .
- ^ Stiassny, Melanie L. J. (August 7, 1990). "Notes on the Anatomy and Relationships of the Bedotiid Fishes of Madagascar, with a Taxonomic Revision of the Genus Rheocles (Atherinomorpha: Bedotiidae)" (PDF) (2979): 1–33.
- ^ a b c Sparks, John S.; Smith, W. Leo (2004). "Phylogeny and biogeography of the Malagasy and Australasian rainbowfishes (Teleostei: Melanotaenioidei): Gondwanan vicariance and evolution in freshwater" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 33: 719–734. doi: .