Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Phoxinus lagowskii steindachneri; Phoxinus steindachneri is a species of freshwater fish in the family Cyprinidae. It is found in northeastern Asia. [1] References
The Amur minnow or Lagowski's minnow (Rhynchocypris lagowskii) is an Asian species of small freshwater cyprinid fish. [1] It is found from the Lena and Amur rivers in the north to the Yangtze in China in the south, and in Japan.
Phoxinus percnurus suifunensis Pseudophoxinus oxycephalus [ 1 ] The Chinese minnow ( Rhynchocypris oxycephalus ) is an Asian species of small freshwater cyprinid fish. [ 2 ]
Rhynchocypris lagowskii (Dybowski, 1869) (Amur minnow) Rhynchocypris oxycephalus (Sauvage & Dabry de Thiersant, 1874) (Chinese minnow) Rhynchocypris percnurus (Pallas, 1814) (Lake minnow) Rhynchocypris poljakowii (Kessler, 1879) (Balkhash minnow)
Rhynchocypris lagowskii — Amur minnow; Rhynchocypris percnurus — Lake minnow; Romanogobio. Romanogobio albipinnatus — White-finned gudgeon; Romanogobio ciscaucasicus — North Caucasian long-barbelled gudgeon; Romanogobio pentatrichus — Kuban long-barbelled gudgeon; Romanogobio tenuicorpus — Amur whitefin gudgeon; Rutilus (Roaches)
The Black kokanee or Kunimasu, once thought to be extinct, is now classed as extinct in the wild. This list of freshwater fish recorded in Japan is primarily based on the IUCN Red List, which, for fish found in inland waters, details the conservation status of some two hundred and sixty-one species, seventy-three of them endemic. [1]
Phoxinus is a genus of freshwater fish in the family Leuciscidae of order Cypriniformes, and the only members of the subfamily Phoxininae, or Eurasian minnows. [1] [2
The first intermediate hosts of Metagonimus miyatai include freshwater snails Semisulcospira libertina, [2] Semisulcospira dolorosa, [2] and Koreoleptoxis globus. [3]The second intermediate host include freshwater fish: Phoxinus lagowskii steindachneri, [2] Zacco platypus, Nipponocypris temminckii, Plecoglossus altivelis, Tribolodon hakonensis, and Tribolodon brandtii, Opsariichthys bidens.