From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genus of fishes
Golden mahseer (Tor putitora ) Babai River, Nepal
Tor is a
genus of
cyprinid fish commonly known as
mahseers .
Species
The currently recognized species in this genus are:
Tor ater
T. R. Roberts , 1999
Tor dongnaiensis
H. Đ. Hoàng ,
H. M. Phạm ,
J.-D. Durand ,
N. T. Trần &
P. D. Phan , 2015 (Dongnai mahseer)
[1]
Tor douronensis (
Valenciennes , 1842) (semah)
Tor hemispinus
Y. R. Chen &
X. L. Chu , 1985
Tor khudree (
Sykes , 1839) (black mahseer)
Tor kulkarnii
Menon , 1992 (dwarf mahseer)
Tor laterivittatus
W. Zhou &
G. H. Cui , 1996
Tor malabaricus
Jerdon , 1849 (Malabar mahseer)
Tor mosal (
F. Hamilton , 1822)
[1]
Tor mekongensis
H. Đ. Hoàng ,
H. M. Phạm ,
J.-D. Durand ,
N. T. Trần &
P. D. Phan , 2015 (Mekong mahseer)
[1]
Tor polylepis
W. Zhou &
G. H. Cui , 1996
Tor putitora (
F. Hamilton , 1822) (Himalayan mahseer)
Tor cf. putitora largest known species of
cavefish
[2] (now
Neolissochilus pnar )
Tor remadevii
Kurup &
Radhakrishnan , 2007
[3] (orange-finned mahseer)
Tor sinensis
H. W. Wu , 1977 (Chinese mahseer)
Tor tambra (
Valenciennes , 1842)
Tor tambroides (
Bleeker , 1854) (Malayan mahseer, empurau)
Tor tor (
F. Hamilton , 1822) (red-finned mahseer)
Tor yingjiangensis
Z. M. Chen &
J. X. Yang , 2004
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Tor .
^
a
b
c Hoàng Huy Đức, Phạm Hùng Mạnh, Durand, J.-D., Trần Ngân Trọng & Phan Phúc Đình (2015): Mahseers genera Tor and Neolissochilus (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) from southern Vietnam. Zootaxa, 4006 (3): 551-568.
^ Dan Harries, Thomas Arbenz, Neelesh Dahanukar, Rajeev Raghavan, Mark Tringham, Duwaki Rangad and Graham Proudlove. 2019.
The World’s Largest Known Subterranean Fish: A Discovery in Meghalaya (NE India) of A Cave-adapted Fish related to the Golden Mahseer, Tor putitora (Hamilton 1822). Cave & Karst Science. 46(3) ; 121–126.
^ Kurup, B.M. & Radhakrishnan, K.V. (2011): Tor remadevii , a new species of Tor (Gray) from Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary, Pambar River, Kerala, Southern India. Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society, 107 (3): 227-230.