New Polypterus described - P. mokelembembe

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Polypterus mokelembembe was found in the central Congo basin.

A new species of Polypterus, originally discovered by fishkeepers in the aquarium trade, has just been described by scientists.

The species, which has been available in the shops under the temporary trade name Polypterus sp. "Congo", is similar to Polypterus retropinnis.

It has just been named Polypterus mokelembembe by Frank Schafer and Ulrich Schliewen in the systematics journal Zootaxa.

During the study, Schliewen and Schafer studied retropinnis and Polypterus in museum collections and found that some of these already contained the "new" species.

Indeed, the original description of Polypterus retropinnis, which was written in 1899, was actually based on both retropinnis and mokelembembe, so Schafer and Schliewen have also redescribed retropinnis to clarify its features.


Spot the difference
While fishkeepers have been able to differentiate the new species from retropinnis and its relatives on the basis of colour, the study has shown that the fish also has a distinctive number of predorsal scales.

P. retropinnis, palmas palmas, and the relatively recently described P. teugelsi, also have 32-37 predorsal scales, rather than the 11-28 seen in other species, but colour and some other characters can be used to distinguish the species.

Schliewen and Schafer say:
"It differs from P. teugelsi by having 57-60 lateral line scales (vs. 63-65), from Polypterus palmas palmas by a single large black blotch on pectoral fin base (vs. numerous small spots on posterior part of base), and from P. retropinnis in having a wider first dorsal spine (6.4-8.1 vs 4.6-6.1% of HL), a shorter internostril distance (11.6-13.7 vs 14.3-18% of HL), and fewer pectoral fin rays (23-29 vs 30-34)."


P. mokelembembe also has a set of irregular blotches that form saddles, and there's no distinct border between the darker colour of the back and the paler colour of the belly, as you tend to see in retropinnis, teugelsi, palmas and weeksii.

The fish is known from several places through the Congo basin, including the Tshuapa drainage in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Alima drainage in the Republic of Congo.

Those fishes in the aquarium trade are reportedly collected from a blackwater stream at Kinkole, east of Kinshasa.

The fish is named after the Mokele-mbembe, a mythical creature believed to be a dinosaur that survived after the extinction of other dinosaurs. Polypterids are ancient fishes, and are the sister group to fishes that were around at the time dinosaurs roamed the earth.

http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/pfk/pages/item.php?news=851
For more details on the new polypterid see the paper: Schliewen, UK and F Schafer (2006) - Polypterus mokelembembe, a new species of bichir from the central Congo River basin (Actinopterygii: Cladistia: Polypteridae). Zootaxa, 1129: 23-36.
 
Okay let see the pronounciations on this one lol Mokele-mbembe-Anne
 
Heres the name with the accents mokèlé-mbèmbé -Anne
 
awesome tale, so that brings the total number of bichirs to what about 15?

what colors come out in the new species and are they lower or upper jaw?
 
Thanks for the update, Jack! Mokelembembe just rolls off the tongue! :P

I'm confused though. (Nothing new here.) The picture shown looks more like P. retropinnis than P. sp. "Congo" aka "Zaire green."
 
rasdbo said:
what colors come out in the new species and are they lower or upper jaw?
P. mokelembembe is upper jaw, as is P. teugelsi.
 
Its just the fancy scientific name for the old congo or ziare green thats been arouind for a while not a new discovered species.Described just means scientific study has been made using measurements and counts to establish it as its own species or subspecies,in this case it's own species-Anne
 
Correct me if I am wrong but isn't the name mokelembembe the name given to a mysterious "monster" beast in the Congo? I believe scientist thought it was a dnosaur at first, but I think later they found out it was a rhino or something cause the people from that region have never seen a rhino before. I remember watching a show onit on Animal Planet or something.
 
Q.Correct me if I am wrong but isn't the name mokelembembe the name given to a mysterious "monster" beast in the Congo?
A.you would be correct.
Q.I believe scientist thought it was a dnosaur at first, but I think later they found out it was a rhino or something cause the people from that region have never seen a rhino before. I remember watching a show onit on Animal Planet or something.
A.Once again you are correct.Its now a mythical creature believed to be a dinosaur that survived after the extinction of other dinosaurs. However since Polypterids did survive the extinction of the dinosaurs its a fitting name.-Anne
 
icthyophile said:
Thanks for the update, Jack! Mokelembembe just rolls off the tongue! :P

I'm confused though. (Nothing new here.) The picture shown looks more like P. retropinnis than P. sp. "Congo" aka "Zaire green."
and it would appear you are on to something....i was sorta wondering about that

this was pointed out in other forum. apparently there's a slight error on the PFK site. according to Joe (Fruitbat), the following is what the authors of the paper intended, whether the scientific community will following suit i don't know.

Polypterus mokelembembe is the new name for the fish that we have been referring to as P. retropinnis for years.

The formerly undescribed species known as P. sp. 'Congo' aka Zaire Green has been renamed Polypterus retropinnis.


fun eh
 
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