Chaca hamiltonii Gray, 1831 - Unneeded replacement name for Platystacus chaca
Chaca lophioides Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1832 - Unneeded replacement name for Platystacus chaca
Chaca buchanani Günther, 1864 - Unneeded replacement name for Platystacus chaca
Originally described using material (not deposited in an institution) from ‘rivers and ponds of the northern parts of Bengal’, the current accepted range is India, Bangladesh, and possibly Nepal. There are reports from Myanmar, Malay, and Indonesia but these probably represent the other two species. According to Roberts (1982) the name chaca is transliterated from a Bengali name for the fish, and that this in turn derives from the sound the fish makes when it is out of water. This species reportedly reaches 19 cm SL, but I have never seen true C. chaca that size.
Chaca chaca | ||
Chaca cf. chaca | ||
Chaca bankanensis Bleeker, 1852
Chaca bankae Giebel, 1857 (emendation or mistake for C. bankanensis?)
It is possible that the peninsular Malaysian, Thai, and Singapore specimens represent
As reported in Ferraris (1991), some specimens have white eyes, (see image). The white appears to be confined to upper part of the cornea, and/or sclera, and not to the iris, therefore I do not think that this makes them blind. One of Kamphol’s photographs appears to show an albino or a xanthic (yellow) specimen.
Chaca bankanensis Peninsular Form from Narathiwat Province, Thailand | ||
Chaca bankanensis Archipelagic Form | ||
Chaca bankanensis Archipelagic Form | |
Chaca bankanensis Archipelagic & Peninsular Form | ||
This species was described on the basis of four specimens in the Natural History Museum, London (see image of holotype). The largest type specimen is 20.35 cm, and they originate from the Sittang River, Burma (Myanmar). Obviously the species takes it’s name from Burma.
The shape, and outward appearance of this species are more similar to chaca than to bankanensis. It tends to be a dark / black base colour, mottled with light brown to tan colour, which can be the case for some C. chaca.
I have found that a small (approx. 7 cm TL) specimen from Pegu, Myanmar, killed two Hypostomus and almost killed two Bunocephalus species within a week of being put in their tank (which was approx. 12 inch by 10 inch). The Hypostomus died first, and at the same time the Bunocephalus started to develop open sores/burns in their skin and were hanging in upper water, but within a day of removing the burmensis and doing a 25% water change, they quite obviously started to pull round and return to normal. I considered whether it was the water parameters crashing, but the burmensis was absolutely fine, so I consider that it was releasing a poison into the water. Roberts (1982) states that there is an axillary (pertaining to the axilla
- literally the ‘armpit’, so in fishes, near the junction of the pectoral fin and the pectoral girdle, more specifically the cleithrum - Diogo et al 2004) pore in all Chaca’s but there was no evidence to show that it
Kamphol Udomritthiruj (who exported the burmensis specimens pictured), has seen many specimens from Pegu, Myanmar. He informed me that he has witnessed burmensis curling the maxillary barbels to lure prey.
Chaca burmensis from Pegu, Myanmar | ||
Chaca burmensis from Pegu, Myanmar | ||
Differentiating the species
As mentioned earlier, colour and/or pattern alone is not a reliable indicator. Ferraris & Brown give some characters, but some of them can only be accurately used by utilising dead specimens and having knowledge of their anatomy (for which Diogo et al 2004 is useful).
Chaca chaca | Chaca bankanensis Archipelagic Form | Chaca burmensis |
Differentiating chaca from burmensis using the naked eye is not as easy. Most of the differences listed in Brown & Ferraris use information inaccessible for aquarists using live fish. The number and extent of cirri is very variable in chaca, so although burmensis appear generally to have less, some chaca do also. C. burmensis tend to have a blacker base colour, but again this can be seen in chaca also. Brown & Ferraris state that “On the head, flattened flaps of skin, usually branched at the tip, occur laterally in the region of the cheek and opercle. None is found along the dorsal surface of the head or immediately posterior to the eye, as in C. chaca”. However, in some C. chaca, there aren’t any flattened flaps of skin on the head, or associated with the eye either (although there are cirri, but there are also some cirri in burmensis). The easiest way I have found to differentiate them using live specimens, is to look at the number and relative size of the cirri along the inner edge of the lower lip. In the C. burmensis I have seen, they usually number around 10 or 11 small cirri, and they don’t tend to have them near the corners of the mouth. In the C. chaca that I have seen, they tend to number at 14+ and tend to be relatively longer and/or thicker.
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