Synodontis petricola

Synodontis petricola, known as the cuckoo catfish,[2] or the pygmy leopard catfish,[3] is a species of upside-down catfish endemic to Burundi, Zambia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Tanzania where it is only known from Lake Tanganyika.[2][4] It was first described by Belgian ichthyologist Hubert Matthes in 1959.[4] The species name "petricola" is derived from a combination of the Latin petra, meaning stone or rock, and the Latin cola, meaning inhabitant. This refers to the rocky environment where this species is found.[3]

Synodontis petricola

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Siluriformes
Family: Mochokidae
Genus: Synodontis
Species:
S. petricola
Binomial name
Synodontis petricola
Matthes, 1959

Description

Like all members of the genus Synodontis, S. petricola has a strong, bony head capsule that extends back as far as the first spine of the dorsal fin.[5] The head is about 310 of the standard length of the fish.[4] The head contains a distinct narrow, bony external protrusion called a humeral process.[3] The shape and size of the humeral process helps to identify the species. In S. petricola, the humeral process is triangular, rough, and is covered in many small, thin papillae.[4] The bottom edge has a poorly-defined ridge on the bottom edge, and the top edge is convex.[4] The humeral process ends in a sharp point.[4] It is about 12 of the length of the head.[4] The diameter of the eye is about 19 of the length of the head.[4]

The fish has three pairs of barbels. The maxillary barbels are on located on the upper jaw, and two pairs of mandibular barbels are on the lower jaw. The maxillary barbel has a narrow membrane attached near the base and is straight without any branches.[4] It extends at least as far as the base of the pectoral sping, about 34 of the length of the head.[4] The outer pair of mandibular barbels extends just past the start of the pectoral girdle, about 12 of the length of the head,[4] and contains four to seven simple branches, usually without any secondary branches.[4] The inner pair of mandibular barbels is about 13 to 23 as long as the outer pair, about 14 of the length of the head,[4] with four to six branches, with many secondary branches present.[4]

The skin of S. petricola has a large number of tiny vertical skin folds. The exact purpose of the skin folds is not known, but is a characteristic of the species of Syndontis that are endemic to Lake Tanganyika.[4] External granular papilla are present on the head, but not the body.[4]

The front edges of the dorsal fins and the pectoral fins of Syntontis species are hardened into stiff spines.[3] In S. petricola, the spine of the dorsal fin is long, about 34 as long as the head,[4] is slightly curved, is smooth on the front and with fine serrations the back, and ends with short, white filament.[4] The remaining portion of the dorsal fin is made up of seven dark branching rays.[4] The spine of the pectoral fin is slightly curved, roughly as long as the dorsal fin spine, with large serrations on the back side.[4] The pectoral spine ends in short, white filament.[4] The rest of the pectoral fins are made up of eight to nine branching rays.[4] The adipose fin is large, does not contain any rays, and has a convex shape.[4] The pelvic fin contains one unbranched and six branched rays.[4] The front edge of the pelvic fin is vertically aligned midway between with the back edge of the dorsal fin and the front edge of the adipose fin.[4] The anal fin contains three to four unbranched and seven to nine branched rays; it is vertically aligned with the center of the adipose fin.[4] The tail, or caudal fin, is forked, with rounded lobes, and contains eight rays on the upper lobe, nine rays on the lower lobe.[4]

The mouth of the fish faces downward and has wide lips that contain papilla.[4] All members of Syndontis have a structure called a premaxillary toothpad, which is located on the very front of the upper jaw of the mouth. This structure contains several rows of short, chisel-shaped teeth. In some species, this toothpad is made up of a large patch with several rows in a large cluster. In other species of Syndontis, this toothpad is clearly divided into two separate groups, separated by a thin band of skin that divides the toothpad.[4] This character is used as a method of differentiating between to different but similar species of Syndontis.[4] In S. petricola, the toothpad is interrupted, or clearly divided between the groups of teeth on the toothpad.[4] On the lower jaw, or mandible, the teeth of Syndontis are attached to flexible, stalk-like structures and described as "s-shaped" or "hooked".[3][5] The number of teeth on the mandible is used to differentiate between species; in S. petricola, there are 31 to 50 teeth on the mandible, arranged in a six short rows.[4]

Some of the species of Synodontis have an opening or series of openings called the axillary pore. It is located on the side of the body below the humeral process and before the pectoral fin spine. The exact function of the port is not known to scientists, although its presence has been observed in seven other catfish genera. Fish in the genus Acrochordonichthys have been observed to secrete a mucus with toxic properties from their axillary pore, but there is no scientific consensus as to the exact purpose of the secretion or the pore.[4] S. petricola has a small axillary pore just below the humeral process.[4]

The back of the fish is yellowish to copper-brown and is covered with large, irregularly-shaped black spots.[4] In juveniles, these spots can appear larger and sometimes intersect.[4] The underside of the fish is lighter, with small, irregularly shaped spots. Most of the species of Synodontis of Lake Tanganyika have a recognizable pattern consisting of dark triangles at the bases of all of the rayed fins, present in S. petricola, and the back edges of the fins are white in color.[4] The caudal fin has a black bar that runs from the base of each lobe to the top of the fin.[4] The barbels are white.[4]

The maximum standard length of all known specimens is 11.5 centimetres (4.5 in) and a total length of 13.5 centimetres (5.3 in).[2][4] In general in Synodontis species, females tend to be slightly larger than males of the same age.[6]

Habitat and behavior

In the wild, the species is endemic to Lake Tanganyika, which has a temperature range of 23 to 26 °C (73 to 79 °F), and an approximate pH of 8.5 – 9, and dH range of 4-15.[7] It inhabits rocky shorelines in the littoral zone, to a maximum depth of 30 metres (98 ft).[4] The reproductive habits of most of the species of Synodontis are not known, beyond some instances of obtaining egg counts from gravid females.[4] Spawning likely occurs during the flooding season between July and October, and pairs swim in unison during spawning.[8] Juveniles appear to be carnivorous, feeding on water mites, seed shrimp, and insect larvae. Adults feed on algae scraped from rocks as well as small invertebrates.[4] The growth rate is rapid in the first year, then slows down as the fish age.[6] The pygmy leopard catfish practices brood parasitism. It lives among rock piles frequented by various species of mauna: small African cichlids. Courtship behaviour culminates with the female sucking sperm from the male's cloaca. She brings the sperm through her digestive tract to her cloaca, where her eggs meet the sperm. She then rushes into the nest of a cichlid, devours the eggs, and deposits her own. The cichlids then raise the catfish as their own.


gollark: No.
gollark: This may require testing. It's not impossible that *somehow* `pcall` is using the "real" environment, but I have no idea what would cause htat.
gollark: ```lua -- if function is not from within the VM, return env from within sandbox function environment.getfenv(arg) local env if type(arg) == "number" then env = gf(arg + 1) else gf(arg) end if not env or env._HOST and string.find(env._HOST, "YAFSS") == nil then return gf() else return env end end```
gollark: Well, that's incredibly weird and I have no idea what causes that!
gollark: I'll have to check the... YAFSS, I think... code for getfenv?

References

  1. Ntakimazi, G. (2006). "Synodontis petricola". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2006: e.T60818A12413139. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2006.RLTS.T60818A12413139.en.
  2. Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2016). "Synodontis petricola" in FishBase. June 2016 version.
  3. "Synodontis petricola Matthes, 1959". Planet Catfish. 29 Oct 2014. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  4. Wright, J.J. & L.M. Page (2006). "Taxonomic Revision of Lake Tanganyikan Synodontis (Siluriformes: Mochokidae)". Florida Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull. 46 (4): 99–154.
  5. Cuvier, Georges (1934). The Animal Kingdom Arranged in Conformity with its Organization, Volume 10. Translated by Griffith, Edward. London: Whittaker and Co. p. 406.
  6. H. M. Bishai & Y. B. Abu Gideiri (1965). "Studies on the biology of genus Synodontis at Khartoum". Hydrobiologia. 26 (1–2): 85–97. doi:10.1007/BF00142257.
  7. Smith, F. (2001). "A preliminary investigation of some chemical and physical profiles of Lake Tanganyika" (PDF). Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  8. John P. Friel & Thomas R. Vigliotta (March 2, 2009). "Mochokidae Jordan 1923: African squeaker and suckermouth catfishes". Tree of Life Web Project. Retrieved 19 October 2016.

Data related to Synodontis petricola at Wikispecies

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