Pseudotropheus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Pseudotropheus | |
|---|---|
| Pseudotropheus cyaneorhabdos | |
| Pseudotropheus elongatus | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Actinopterygii |
| Order: | Cichliformes |
| Family: | Cichlidae |
| Tribe: | Haplochromini |
| Genus: | Pseudotropheus Regan, 1922 |
| Type species | |
| Chromis williamsi Günther, 1894 | |
Pseudotropheus is a genus of fishes in the family Cichlidae. These mbuna cichlids are endemic to Lake Malawi in Eastern Africa.
Like some other large cichlid genera, such as Cichlasoma, a number of related fishes have been recently reassigned to different genera such as Tropheops or Maylandia. Some species of Melanochromis in turn have been moved into Pseudotropheus.
There are currently 25 recognized species in this genus:[1]
- Pseudotropheus ater Stauffer, 1988
- Pseudotropheus benetos (Bowers & Stauffer, 1997)
- Pseudotropheus brevis (Trewavas, 1935)
- Pseudotropheus crabro (Ribbink & D. S. C. Lewis, 1982)
- Pseudotropheus cyaneorhabdos (Bowers & Stauffer, 1997)
- Pseudotropheus cyaneus Stauffer, 1988
- Pseudotropheus demasoni Konings, 1994
- Pseudotropheus elegans Trewavas, 1935[2]
- Pseudotropheus elongatus Fryer, 1956
- Pseudotropheus flavus Stauffer, 1988
- Pseudotropheus fuscoides Fryer, 1956
- Pseudotropheus fuscus Trewavas, 1935
- Pseudotropheus galanos Stauffer & Kellogg, 2002
- Pseudotropheus interruptus (D. S. Johnson, 1975)
- Pseudotropheus joanjohnsonae (D. S. Johnson, 1974)
- Pseudotropheus johannii Eccles, 1973
- Pseudotropheus likomae Konings, Miller, & Stauffer 2024[3]
- Pseudotropheus longior Seegers, 1996
- Pseudotropheus minutus Fryer, 1956
- Pseudotropheus perileucos (Bowers & Stauffer, 1997)
- Pseudotropheus perspicax (Trewavas, 1935)
- Pseudotropheus purpuratus D. S. Johnson, 1976
- Pseudotropheus saulosi Konings, 1990
- Pseudotropheus socolofi D. S. Johnson, 1974
- Pseudotropheus tursiops W. E. Burgess & H. R. Axelrod, 1975
- Pseudotropheus williamsi (Günther, 1894)
Several of these were moved to the new genus Chindongo in 2016.[4]