Anguilla bengalensis

Species of fish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The mottled eel[3] (Anguilla bengalensis), also known as the African mottled eel, the Indian longfin eel, the Indian mottled eel, the long-finned eel or the river eel,[4] is a demersal, catadromous[5] eel in the family Anguillidae.[6] It was described by John McClelland in 1844.[7] It is a tropical, freshwater eel which is known from East Africa, Bangladesh, Andaman Islands, Mozambique, Malawi, Sri Lanka, Sumatra, and Indonesia and recently from Madagascar.[8] The eels spend most of their lives in freshwater at a depth range of 3–10 metres (10–30 ft), but migrate to the Indian Ocean to breed. Males can reach a maximum total length of 121 centimetres (48 in) and a maximum weight of 7 kilograms (15 lb).[6] The eels feed primarily off of benthic crustaceans, mollusks, finfish and worms.[9]

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
Anguilla bengalensis
A. b. bengalensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Anguilliformes
Family: Anguillidae
Genus: Anguilla
Species:
A. bengalensis
Binomial name
Anguilla bengalensis
(J. E. Gray, 1831)
Subspecies

A. b. bengalensis
A. b. labiata

Synonyms[2]
  • Muraena bengalensis Gray, 1831
  • Anguilla bengalensis (non Gray, 1831)
  • Anguilla elphinstonei Sykes, 1839
  • Anguilla nebulosa nebulosa McClelland, 1844
Close

Even though widely distributed, the Mottled eel was listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN Redlist as of 2019.[1] Although the eels are too large for use in aquariums, they are commercial in subsistence fisheries.[6]

The exact classification of the species was a debate in recent times, where some major fish websites (ex. Fish Base) classified the species under the name A. nebulosa. But according to the IUCN Red List 2015 version, the fish species should be classified as A. bengalensis with some subspecies.[1]

Subspecies

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI