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Bedotiidae

Bedotiidae
Bedotia geayi 1.jpg
Bedotia madagascariensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Atheriniformes
Infraorder: Atherinoidei
Family: Bedotiidae
Regan, 1903
Genera

Bedotia
Rheocles


Bedotia
Rheocles

The Bedotiidae are a family of fish known as the Madagascar rainbowfish, Madagascan rainbowfish, or Malagasy rainbowfish due to their endemism to Madagascar. It includes two genera, Bedotia and Rheocles.

As the common name rainbowfish implies, they are generally colorful fishes. Bedotiids are elongated, laterally compressed, and rarely exceed 100 mm in standard length. Bedotiids exhibit varying degrees of sexual dimorphism, which is quite pronounced in some species.

The anal fin spine is weak or absent.

The entire family of Bedotiidae is endemic to Madagascar. Bedotiids occur exclusively in freshwater environments and are distributed in small to medium-sized forested rivers and streams, occasionally in swamps and marshes, spanning nearly the entire eastern slope of Madagascar (R. derhami is recorded from a westward draining Sofia River basin in the northeast of the island).

Bedotiid fishes are under severe threat because of rapid deforestation and habitat modification throughout most of their range. Because Bedotia and Rheocles are generally the first to exhibit population declines or disappear from areas where habitat is moderately to highly disturbed or degraded, they are reliable indicators of ecosystem health and stability.

This family includes the two genera Bedotia and Rheocles, with at least 13 species. This family is monophyletic. This group is considered by Nelson, 2006 Fishes of the World to be a subfamily of the family Melanotaeniidae. In a 2004, this family is placed in a suborder Melanotaenioidei which includes the sister groups Bedotiidae and Melanotaeniidae, as well as Pseudomugilidae (including Telmatherinidae). The sister-group relationship between Bedotiidae and Melanotaeniidae is most parsimoniously explained by the break-up of Gondwana.


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Wikipedia

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