Rakthamichthys Explained
Rakthamichthys is a genus of swamp eels that are endemic to India. Three species are known from the Western Ghats and one is known from Northeast India.
All species live underground, with one species (R. rongsaw) having a fossorial lifestyle and three species (R. digressus, R. roseni, and R. indicus) being troglobitic in nature. All species display adaptations to this lifestyle, including a bright red coloration and highly reduced eyes.[1]
Taxonomy
All four species were formerly classified in the genus Monopterus until a 2020 study found significant genetic and osteological differences between them and the rest of Monopterus, including unique and highly divergent characteristics in the gill arch skeleton. This led to the species being classified in a new genus Rakthamichthys, with "raktham" meaning "blood-red" in Malayalam, as a reference to their distinctive coloration.[2] [3] [4]
Species
- Rakthamichthys digressus (K. C. Gopi, 2002) (blind eel)[5]
- Rakthamichthys indicus (Eapen, 1963) (Malabar blind swamp eel) (=Monopterus eapeni Talwar, 1991)
- Rakthamichthys mumba (Jayasimhan, Thackeray, Mohapatra & Kumar, 2021)
- Rakthamichthys rongsaw (Britz, D. Sykes, Gower, & Kamei, 2018) [6]
- Rakthamichthys roseni (R. M. Bailey & Gans, 1998)
Notes and References
- Web site: Osteology of 'Monopterus' roseni with the description of Rakthamichthys, new genus, and comments on the generic assignment of the Amphipnous Group species (Teleostei: Synbranchiformes). 2021-01-28. Dr. Friedrich Pfeil Publishing. en-US.
- Web site: Swamp eel: Blood-red subterranean dweller is newest fish genus discovered. 2021-01-28. phys.org. en.
- Web site: Rakthamichthys rongsaw. 2021-01-28. cavefishes.org.uk. en-GB.
- Web site: Taxonomy browser (Rakthamichthys). 2021-01-28. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
- Gopi, K.C. (2002). A new synbranchid fish, Monopterus digressus from Kersla, Peninsular India. Rec. zool. Surv. India 100(1-2) : 137-143.
- Web site: Monopterus rongsaw, a new species of hypogean swamp eel from the Khasi Hills in Northeast India (Teleostei: Synbranchiformes: Synbranchidae) – Pfeil Verlag. 2019-03-04. pfeil-verlag.de. de-DE.