Crossocheilus burmanicus Hora, 1936

Kottelat, Maurice, 2003, Nomenclatural Status Of Crossocheilus Burmanicus, C. Horai And C. Multirastellatus (Osteichthyes: Cyprinidae), Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 51 (2), pp. 399-401 : 399-400

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13229209

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/18378242-FFE2-1579-B60E-3184FDB12F8F

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Felipe

scientific name

Crossocheilus burmanicus Hora
status

 

Crossocheilus burmanicus Hora View in CoL

Mukerji (1934: 52, fig. 6) discussed various populations of Crossocheilus latius , recognising a ‘typical form’ from northern Bengal , the ‘Assamese and Burmese form’ and a ‘ Punjab form’. Mukerji gave the formal name C. l. punjabensis to the ‘ Punjab form’ but he did not use a formal name for the ‘Assamese and Burmese form’ .

Hora (1936: 319, 324) reviewed Mukerji’s data and commented about the ambiguous use of the word Assamese as the Assam of that time included streams draining to the Ganges as well as the Irrawaddy basins. Hora found that the Ganges basin Assamese populations belong to typical C. latius , “whereas the form burmanicas (this new specific name is proposed for the Assamese and Burmese form of Mukerji) is found in the various drainage systems of Burma ”.

On p. 319, Hora had used the spelling burmanicus . The first reviser ( Kottelat, 1989: 7) retained burmanicus as the correct original spelling (and burmanicas as an incorrect original spelling). Hora is somewhat ambiguous in that he used the term ‘form’ and calls burmanicus a ‘specific name’. I treat it as a specific name ( C. burmanicus ). Even if one were to treat it as a form, it does not change the following discussion and conclusion.

The name, however, was not accompanied by a diagnosis, but it is available under article 12.1 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN, 1999), satisfying article 11, and is accompanied by an indication, in the form of a “bibliographic reference to a previously published description or definition” (article 12.2.1). The reference is Mukerji (1934: 52). Hora also further referred records of C. latius in Vinciguerra (1890: 280) and Mukerji (1932: 283) to C. burmanicus .

The type series of the species “consists of all the specimens included by the author” [here Hora, 1936] (ICZN, article 72.4.1). Therefore the syntypes are the Burmese specimens of Mukerji (1932, 1934) and Vinciguerra (1890), as well as those Assamese specimens of Mukerji (1934), if any is from the part of Assam draining to the Irrawaddy basin.

Mukerji (1934) mentions having examined “a large series of specimens from Assam collected by Dr. S. L. Hora from various streams of Manipur, and from Burma only three specimens, one from the Kyenchaung river in the Mergui District and two from the Phungin Hka in the Myitkyina District”. The Manipur specimens apparently refer to material reported by Hora (1921: 183) according to Hora (1936: 324). Hora (1921: 167, 183) records the following information for his “ C. latius ” in Manipur: “sluggish streams in the Manipur Valley” and “streams with rocky bed in the southern watershed of the Naga hills”. Hora (1921: 168) explains that streams of the ‘southern watershed’ flow into the Manipur Valley. The Manipur Valley drains to the Irrawaddy basin.

All these specimens were in the Zoological Survey of India. It is not known whether they are still there. Some may have been lost with other collections in the 1943 flood of the Ganges ( Chopra, 1946); some may have earlier been used for exchange with foreign museums.

The only specimen mentioned by Mukerji (1932: 283) is the specimen from Kyenchaung listed in 1934. Vinciguerra (1890: 286) based his account on 2 specimens from “Meetan” in the collections of the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale, Genova. “Meetan” is Mitan Chaung, a rivulet flowing south from the summit of Mulayet Taung, 16 11’N 98 32’E, in the Salween basin ( Kottelat, 1988: 495).

Su et al. (2000) do not mention C. burmanicus . Neither do they mention any of the Myanmarese or Thai records of the species, nor differences between their material from the Irrawaddy and Salween basins. The species is recorded from Thai waters by Ukkatawewat & Vidthayanon (1998: 20) and I have observed it to be frequent in the Mae Nam Moei, a tributary of the Salween. I am unable to see differences between C. burmanicus as figured and diagnosed by Mukerji (1934) and Hora (1936), C. multirastellus as described by Su et al. (2000) and my material from the Mae Nam Moei (CMK 14672, 13; CMK 14698, 3) and therefore I am treating C. multirastellus as a junior subjective synonym of C. burmanicus . A detailed comparison of the Irrawaddy and Salween populations might show differences, but at the moment I have no access to material from the Irrawaddy.

Su et al. (2000) compared C. multirastellus with, among others, C. latius diplocheilus . Kullander et al. (1999: 135) have commented that C. diplocheilus does not belong to Crossocheilus (difficulties with the nomenclature and identity of several available generic and specific names did not allow them to reach a definitive conclusion as to the generic name to be used for this species).

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