Not AvailableThe fishes of the family Leiognathidae form a well-defined group and are widely distributed in the Indo-Pacific, Though small in size, a few species form dense schools in shallow regions, offering great potentialities for commercial exploitation. They are an important source of food and fish meal. The revision collates earlier literature, supplementing with original data based on examination of fresh material of 18 species of the three genera, Leiognathus Lacepfede, Secutor Gistel and Gazza Ruppell from the seas around India and re-examination of types of some species. The characters mainly used by earlier authors to separate the species are the presence or absence of scales on head and chest, number of lateral line scales a...
Since the monumental work of Day on ' The Fishes of India' completed in 1878 additions to our knowle...
The fishes of the family Balistidae are popularly known as trigger fishes and distributed along the...
The present account is the sixth part of the series (Parts I to V appeared in Vols, 6(2): 285-308, 1...
The fishes of the family Leiognathidae form a well-defined group and are widely distributed in the I...
Not AvailableOf the fishes of the family Leiognathidae, Day (1876) reported 14 species from the Ind...
A new species of silverbelly Leiognathus striatus (Leiognathidae: Pisces) from the Gulf of Mannar is...
Species of the family Leiognathidac in the Indo-Pacific area are often considered trash fish but are...
Taxonomy of the fishes of the family Leiognathidae (Pisces, Teleostei) from the West coast of Indi
A total of 16 species of the family Leiognathidae have been collected from the commercial landings ...
Taxonomic identification of leiognathids, which although are morphologically conservative fishes, is...
The subtle external taxonomic differences between closely resembling species of Leiognathidae have ...
The present account is the fifth part of the series [Parts I to IV appeared in Vols. 6(2), 285-308, ...
In the first three parts of the present series which have appeared in this Journal [6(2) 1964 ; 285...
Of the 21 species of silverbellies known from the Indian seas Leiognathus bindus, L. lineolatus, L. ...
The paper deals with the maturation, spawning habits, spawning seasons and fecundity of 17 species ...
Since the monumental work of Day on ' The Fishes of India' completed in 1878 additions to our knowle...
The fishes of the family Balistidae are popularly known as trigger fishes and distributed along the...
The present account is the sixth part of the series (Parts I to V appeared in Vols, 6(2): 285-308, 1...
The fishes of the family Leiognathidae form a well-defined group and are widely distributed in the I...
Not AvailableOf the fishes of the family Leiognathidae, Day (1876) reported 14 species from the Ind...
A new species of silverbelly Leiognathus striatus (Leiognathidae: Pisces) from the Gulf of Mannar is...
Species of the family Leiognathidac in the Indo-Pacific area are often considered trash fish but are...
Taxonomy of the fishes of the family Leiognathidae (Pisces, Teleostei) from the West coast of Indi
A total of 16 species of the family Leiognathidae have been collected from the commercial landings ...
Taxonomic identification of leiognathids, which although are morphologically conservative fishes, is...
The subtle external taxonomic differences between closely resembling species of Leiognathidae have ...
The present account is the fifth part of the series [Parts I to IV appeared in Vols. 6(2), 285-308, ...
In the first three parts of the present series which have appeared in this Journal [6(2) 1964 ; 285...
Of the 21 species of silverbellies known from the Indian seas Leiognathus bindus, L. lineolatus, L. ...
The paper deals with the maturation, spawning habits, spawning seasons and fecundity of 17 species ...
Since the monumental work of Day on ' The Fishes of India' completed in 1878 additions to our knowle...
The fishes of the family Balistidae are popularly known as trigger fishes and distributed along the...
The present account is the sixth part of the series (Parts I to V appeared in Vols, 6(2): 285-308, 1...