Views provided by UsageCounts
Notoglanidium akiri (Risch 1987) (Figs. 2A, 2 B & 10A) Auchenoglanis akiri Risch 1987 Holotype. MRAC 84-15-P-9: Imo river at Umuayara Mba, Etche Rivers State, Nigeria; 4°52’N 7°02’E; 91 mm SL. Paratypes. MRAC 84-15-P-3–4: same locality; 2 spec., 88–92 mm SL. Other specimens examined. MRAC 87-24-P-124–125: New Calabar river at Eveku, Nigeria; 4°55’N, 6°49’E; 2 spec., 59–85 mm SL. MRAC 87-24-P-126–131: New Calabar River at Rumuji, Nigeria; 4°56’N, 6°47’E; 6 spec., 32–74 mm SL. MRAC 88-43-P-307–308: New Calabar, Isiokpo River 3 km south of Isiokpo town, Nigeria; 4°53’N, 6°53’E; 2 spec., 61–69 mm SL. MRAC 93-39-P-73–74: Etim Ekpo, Kwa Ibo River, Nigeria; 5°09’N, 7°40’E; 2 spec., 97–107 mm SL. Diagnosis. Notoglanidium akiri differs from other species in the genus in having: an average interorbital distance (24.1–32.8% HL) [vs. smaller in N. boutchangai (17.2–23.4% HL), N. depierrei (18.2–23.7% HL), N. pallidum (20.0–23.3% HL) and N. pembetadi (17.4–24.0% HL), and larger in N. maculatum (35.3–36.8% HL) and N. thomasi (41.0–46.7% HL)]; a large eye diameter (6.6–10.5% HL) [vs. smaller in N. maculatum (3.3–5.3% HL) and N. pallidum (3.8–7.0% HL)]; a deep adipose fin (4.7–7.3% SL) [vs. less deep in other species except N. macrostoma and N. walkeri (see Table 4)]; an average combined premaxillary tooth plate width, (22.0–26.1% HL) [vs. broader in N. boutchangai (30.1–35.3% HL) and N. macrostoma (33.5–41.7% HL) and smaller (18.2% HL) or less, in all other species except N. depierrei and N. pembetadi]; only seven soft (branched) dorsal-fin rays [vs. more than eight in N. depierrei (9–10), N. maculatum (16–22), N. pallidum (10–13), N. pembetadi (10–13), N. thomasi (12–16) and N. walkeri (11–15)]; a high dorsal-fin spine length (9.8–12.8% SL) [vs. shorter (<7.5% SL) (see Table 4), in all other species except N. macrostoma]. Description. Snout only moderately depressed, body not depressed (predorsal body depth 19.5–24.4% SL, minimal caudal peduncle depth 13.0–15.9% SL, head depth 58.0–75.9% HL). Branchiostegal membranes completely fused. Adipose fin rather high, at 4.7–7.3% SL. See also Table 4. Colouration in alcohol. Brown to greyish; in juveniles the flanks and the adipose fin have a reticulate pattern which may vaguely persist or disappear in adults. Dorsal and caudal fins sometimes spotted; other fins always uniformly greyish. Maximum size recorded. 107 mm SL. Etymology. Named in honour of P.J. Akiri, collector of the type specimens (Risch 1987). Distribution. Known from the Imo and New Calabar River basins, southern Nigeria (Fig. 13).
Published as part of Geerinckx, Tom, Vreven, Emmanuel, Dierick, Manuel, Hoorebeke, Luc Van & Adriaens, Dominique, 2013, Revision of Notoglanidium and related genera (Siluriformes: Claroteidae) based on morphology and osteology, pp. 165-191 in Zootaxa 3691 (1) on page 176, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3691.1.7, http://zenodo.org/record/221669
Actinopterygii, Notoglanidium, Animalia, Biodiversity, Claroteidae, Chordata, Notoglanidium akiri, Siluriformes, Taxonomy
Actinopterygii, Notoglanidium, Animalia, Biodiversity, Claroteidae, Chordata, Notoglanidium akiri, Siluriformes, Taxonomy
| selected citations These citations are derived from selected sources. This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | 0 | |
| popularity This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network. | Average | |
| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Average | |
| impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network. | Average |
| views | 3 |

Views provided by UsageCounts