Labeotropheus alticodia Phiri & Pauers, 2023 |
Family: | Cichlidae (Cichlids), subfamily: Pseudocrenilabrinae | |||
Max. size: | 8.55 cm SL (male/unsexed) | |||
Environment: | benthopelagic; freshwater | |||
Distribution: | Africa: Malawi. | |||
Diagnosis: |
Dorsal spines (total): 16-17; Dorsal soft rays (total): 8-9; Anal spines: 3-3; Anal soft rays: 7-8. Diagnosis: Labeotropheus alticodia differs from the slender-bodied Labeotropheus, Description: Body compressiform; ovoid to almost rectangular in shape; body deep, 37.4-40.6% of standard length, and consistently deep throughout its length; anterior body wide at pectoral fin and opercular tab (Ref. 128773). Scales on belly and anterior abdomen cycloid and tightly crowded; flank scales ctenoid; exposed portion of scale fan-shaped and approximately hexagonal; anterior lateral line overlapping posterior lateral line by 0-4 scales; anterior lateral line scales 21-24, posterior lateral line scales 11-13; dorso-lateral scale rows 9-10; pectoro-pelvic scale rows 10-12 (Ref. 128773). Dorsal fin relatively short for Labeotropheus, 55.8-60.2% of standard length, with 16-17 spines and 8-9 rays; first dorsal spine opposite opercular tab; dorsal rays 3, 4, 5 long, reaching to hypural plate and beyond; anal fin angular and kite-shaped; anal-fin rays 3 and 4 long, reaching past caudal peduncle to caudal fin; anal-fin origin opposite dorsal-fin spine 14 or 15; anal-fin insertion anterior to dorsal-fin insertion; caudal fin subtruncate; pectoral fin rounded; pelvic fin long, minimally reaching origin of anal fin and longer in most specimens; males with filamentous pelvic rays, females non-filamentous; attachment of pelvic fin opposite dorsal-fin spine 5 or 6 (Ref. 128773). Head of typical length for Labeotropheus, 31.8-33.4% of standard length, but deep with strongly curved profile and slightly developed snout; snout long and wide with snout pad of typical length for Labeotropheus, 11.6-14.8% of head length; cheek with 3 scale rows; infraorbital pores 9, with 23-38 neuromasts among them; oral jaws short and wide; oral teeth tricuspid and closely set on both upper and lower jaws; 7-10 tricuspid teeth on lateral portion of left upper jaw (Ref. 128773). Gill rakers stout, triangular, and widely spaced; 6-8 ceratobranchial and 2-3 epibranchial gill rakers on first gill arch; all specimens with 1 raker between the cerato- and epibranchial rakers (Ref. 128773). Colouration: Colouration of males: craniofacial region, from snout to preopercle, dark blue; operculum greyish blue with bright metallic green opercular tab; throat and branchiostegals white; flank and caudal peduncle pale powder blue; 11 faint darker blue bars visible across flank and caudal peduncle; dorsal and caudal fins whitish blue with yellow or orange trailing edges; spinous anal fin pale orange; rayed portion white with 3-5 orange-yellow eggspots; trailing portion of pelvic fin hyaline with white leading edge, and pale orange between (Ref. 128773). Colouration of females: head, body, caudal peduncle uniformly light grey, with 11 faint dark bars extending across flank and caudal peduncle; opercular tab black; scales of flank and caudal peduncle with small orange spots close to insertion of scale; throat and branchiostegals white; dorsal fin white with orange tips; some specimens with orange spots throughout fin, some specimens with orange trailing edge; caudal fin brownish grey, some specimens with orange trailing edge; rayed anal fin pale brownish orange with 1-2 yellow eggspots; spinous portion white; pelvic fin white or hyaline, with bright white leading edge and pale orange between (Ref. 128773). In preservative: males uniformly dark brown or grey with 11 faint vertical bars visible across flank and caudal peduncle on some specimens; females uniformly dark brown or grey with 11 faint vertical bars visible across flank and caudal peduncle on some specimens (Ref. 128773). |
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Biology: | ||||
IUCN Red List Status: | Not Evaluated (N.E.) Ref. (130435) | |||
Threat to humans: | harmless |