Botia unknown01*x

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Martin Thoene
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Botia unknown01*x

Post by Martin Thoene » Sun Oct 22, 2006 12:18 pm

*Work in progress*

Scientific Name: Botia unkown01

Common name: Botia species "Tenasserim River", Emperor Botia.

Distribution: Tenasserim River, Eastern Burma (now Myanmar)

Sexual Dimorphism: Female's abdomen plumper than male's.

Maximum size: 5 inches

Similar to: Botia rostrata, Botia histrionica

Care: The tank should include lots of hiding places amongst rocks and driftwood. Excellent diggers that appreciate a sand substrate to protect the delicate barbels. Lighting should be subdued.

Feeding: Good quality flake, sinking pellets, algae wafers, chopped earthworms, thawed frozen Bloodworm, Mysis Shrimp, chopped Cocktail Shrimp.

Water parameters: pH:6.5-7.5 Hardness: Medium Max dh: 12

Temperature: 76ºF to 82ºF(22-27.7°C)

Breeding: Not bred in aquaria.

Notes: This as yet undescribed species was first caught in about 1993 from the Tenasserim River. While it bears a superficial resemblance to Botia rostrata, the base colour is yellow and appears substantially different to that species. The largest specimens seen have been 5 inches.

Loach enthusiasts often refer to the "Holy Grail". That highly desired species that is virtually unobtainable. For Botia lovers, this is definitely the species that fits that name. Despite having been known since 1993, very few fish have ever been exported and will always command a high price because of rarity and desirability.

Part of the problem that creates the high price is the pure logistics of obtaining the fish from the wild. The Tenasserim area is dominated by the Tenasserim Range, which reaches a height of 6,801 feet (2,074 m), and is bisected by the Tenasserim River, which flows south to the Andaman.

This whole area of old Burma (now Myanmar) is a hot-bed of ethnic insurgent groups fighting government forces. Up until 2003, one supplier was able to obtain these fish using an illegal logging and cigarette smuggling route, but the route has since been blocked by Myanmar's military as part of their war against the local Karen rebels. Large areas are land-mined unfortunately, and this means nobody dares to enter the area.

The Tenasserim River can alternatively be accessed via the border with Thailand, but permits and armed escorts are required adding to costs. To bring fish out requires the assistance of porters and the journey takes 3 days and requires traversing two mountains.

It is hardly suprising that any examples of this species that actually make it out of their native country will command very high prices indeed. Even if hostilities finish, the land-mine presence will create long-term safe access restrictions.

So, even our favourite family of fish cannot escape the circumstances created by politics and the fight for ethnic recognition. We must satisfy ourselves by looking at the beautiful photographs of these fish taken by our friends in that part of the world, as it is unlikely they will ever swim in our aquaria.

Below are photographs showing different stages of development and comparisoms with examples of Botia histrionica. Note differences in proportions of nose to eye length, head profile and eye size to overall head size between the two species.

Image
Caption: This is the first known specimen.
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj


Image
Caption: Emperor Botia 2 inch juvenile
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj


Image
Caption: Emperor Botia 5 inch adult
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: A beautiful group of Emperor Botia caught in 2003 before the original access route closed.
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (background) vs. Botia histrionica (foreground)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (foreground) vs. Botia histrionica (background)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (top/bottom) vs. Botia histrionica (left & middle)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (at rear & right) vs. Botia histrionica (middle & front)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (rear and right, second from front) vs. Botia histrionica (front & left)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (left) vs. Botia histrionica (right)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj

Image
Caption: Emperor Botia (left) vs. Botia histrionica (right)
Credit: Kamphol Udomritthiruj
Last edited by Martin Thoene on Sun Oct 22, 2006 6:00 pm, edited 3 times in total.

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shari2
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Post by shari2 » Sun Oct 22, 2006 2:11 pm

While you were out... 8)
I placed the commentary in the Notes section. If you'd prefer it elsewhere please use either the Care, or caption areas.

Lovely fish!

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Martin Thoene
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Post by Martin Thoene » Sun Oct 22, 2006 4:23 pm

I arranged it like that for a reason. It was kind of arranged as an illustrated narrative, but if it confuses at this stage, no problem.

Martin.
Image Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

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shari2
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Post by shari2 » Sun Oct 22, 2006 5:43 pm

I'm sorry Martin. I realized you probably had a narrative plan, but it doesn't work for the database layout. :cry: It would make a nice article, however...?

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Emma Turner
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Post by Emma Turner » Sun Oct 22, 2006 5:56 pm

Great work, Martin. You've integrated the story well. :wink: Stunning photographs too.

Emma
Image
East of the Sun, West of the Moon.
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Martin Thoene
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Post by Martin Thoene » Sun Oct 22, 2006 5:57 pm

Like I said, not a problem at this stage. Would be kind of nice if Jeff can upload it as a bit more of a narrative after the standardized layout.

I just added a bit in the paragraph just before the pictures.

Martin.
Image Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

Image

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