A new cyprinid fish, Puntius Dolichopterus has been discovered in Kerala's Kayamkulam city, a media report said.
The new fish species has been discovered, named and described by Mathews Plamoottil, head of the department of zoology, Baby John Memorial Government College, near Kollam city, according to the latest issue of 'International Journal of Pure and Applied Zoology'.
The new freshwater fish was collected from a small water stream flowing in the heart of Alappuzha district's Kayamkulam city.
"It is characterised by the longer pectoral fin, shorter dorsal fin, unusually elongated dorsal spine, longer head, lesser number of lateral line scales and pre-dorsal scales. It can be further differentiated from its relative species in having 3-4 longitudinal lines present below lateral line," said Plamoottil.
The name of the new fish "dolichopterus" has been coined from two Greek words 'dolikhos' meaning elongated and 'pteron' meaning wing or fin, as refers to elongated pectoral fin.
Describing the new fish, Plamoottil said the body is silvery, dorsal fin is light orange red, pectoral and anal fin greenish yellow, ventral fin yellow, caudal fin dusky and an inconspicuous dusky spot present on 21 and 22 scales.
The spine of dorsal fin in this fish is rigid, strong and long. They have a pair of small barbels. They are between 7.3 and 8.7 cm in length.
The fish, found in small and shallow water channels, is edible and can be utilised as ornamental fish. The fish is included in the fish family Cyprinidae.
Its congeners (relative species) are Puntius nigronotus, Puntius viridis, Puntius nelsoni and Puntius parrah found in Kerala, Puntius dorsalis found in Chennai and Puntius chola and Puntius sophore residing in the water bodies of the Ganga river.
"All these fish were compared and examined for proving the identity of this new fish. This new barb has received Zoo bank register number from International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature, the official body approving the new names of animals.
"Six specimens of this new fish have been deposited in the Government Museum (Zoological Survey of India) at Port Blair, Andaman and Nicobar Islands," said Plamoottil.
New fish species discovered in Kerala

Category :Education
More News

Exclusive! Teen Ethical Hacker Nisarga Adhikary Claims He Found CBSE Portal Vulnerabilities in Just 20 Minutes

CBSE Improvement Exam Candidate From Saudi Arabia Moves Supreme Court Over Withheld Result

CBSE Receives Over 56,000 Applications for Answer Sheet Review, Foils Major Cyber Attack

Students Worried About Exam Preparation After Attack on Khan Sir’s Coaching Centre in Patna

CBSE Leadership Overhaul: Lokhande Prashant Sitaram Appointed Chairperson, Varun Bhardwaj Named Secretary

NEET-UG Paper Leak Row: Education Ministry Launches Administrative Crackdown
Trending News

Sushmita Dev Resigns from Rajya Sabha and Trinamool Congress, Second TMC Exit This Week
Indian Mangoes Spark US Summer Buying Frenzy as Alphonso, Kesar Stocks Sell Out
Post Kota Maternal Deaths, Fresh Alarm as Five Women Fall Critically Ill After Child Birth in Bikaner
Infrastructure Milestone: Historic Zojila Tunnel Breakthrough Strengthens Kashmir-Ladakh Connectivity
Katy Perry, Justin Trudeau Spark Buzz With First Red Carpet Appearance at Tribeca Festival
Somali World Cup Referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan Denied Entry to United States
US Judge Blocks Trump’s $100,000 H-1B Visa Fee, Calls It an Unlawful Tax
CM Vijay Honours Praggnanandhaa with ₹50 Lakh After Norway Chess Triumph, Plays Friendly Match
Malviya Nagar Fire Tragedy: Casualty Count Climbs to 22 as Nigerian Dies During Treatment
FIR on Khan Sir: NDA Talks Tough on Coaching Mafias, Pappu Yadav Defends Educator
Top News


