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Superregnum: Eukaryota
Cladus: Unikonta
Cladus: Opisthokonta
Cladus: Holozoa
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Superphylum: Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum: Gnathostomata
Megaclassis: Osteichthyes
Superclassis/Classis: Actinopterygii
Classis/Subclassis: Actinopteri
Subclassis/Infraclassis: Neopterygii
Infraclassis: Teleostei
Megacohors: Osteoglossocephalai
Supercohors: Clupeocephala
Cohors: Otomorpha
Subcohors: Ostariophysi
Sectio: Otophysa
Ordo: Cypriniformes
Subordo: Cyprinoidei

Familia: Cyprinidae
Subfamilia: Barbinae
Genus: Barbus

Barbus senso stricto is only valid for some European tetraploid species and some species of the Maghreb and North-East Africa (Doadrio, 1990, Berrebi, 1998, Berrebi et. al., 1996).

Barbus sensu stricto:
B. albanicus – B. anatolicus – B. balcanicus – B. barbulus – B. barbus – B. biharicus – B. callensis – B. caninus – B. carpathicus – B. carottae – B. ciscaucasicus – B. cyclolepis – B. euboicus – B. haasi – B. issenensis – B. goktschaicus – B. ksibi – B. lacerta – B. lepineyi – B. longiceps – B. lorteti – B. macedonicus – B. magniatlantis – B. massaensis – B. meridionalis – B. moulouyensis – B. nasus – B. niluferensis – B. pallaryi – B. peloponnesius – B. petenyi – B. plebejus – B. prespensis – B. subquincunciatus – B. tauricus – B. tyberinus

Barbus sensu lato, probably all of these species need to be placed in different genera:

Species: B. ablabes – B. aboinensis – B. acuticeps – B. afrohamiltoni – B. afrovernayi – B. aliciae – B. alluaudi – B. aloyi – B. altianalis – B. altidorsalis – B. alvarezi – B. amanpoae – B. amatolicus – B. amboseli – B. andrewi – B. anema – B. annectens – B. anniae – B. anoplus – B. ansorgii – B. antinorii – B. apleurogramma – B. arabicus – B. arambourgi – B. arcislongae – B. argenteus – B. aspilus – B. atakorensis – B. atkinsoni – B. atromaculatus – B. bagbwensis – B. barnardi – B. barotseensis – B. baudoni – B. bawkuensis – B. bergi – B. bifrenatus – B. bigornei – B. boboi – B. borysthenicus – B. bourdariei – B. brachygramma – B. brazzai – B. breviceps – B. brevidorsalis – B. brevilateralis – B. brevipinnis – B. brichardi – B. bynni – B. cadenati – B. callipterus – B. camptacanthus – B. candens – B. carcharhinoides – B. carens – B. castrasibutum – B. catenarius – B. caudosignatus – B. cercops – B. chicapaensis – B. chiumbeensis – B. chlorotaenia – B. choloensis – B. citrinus – B. claudinae – B. clauseni – B. collarti – B. condei – B. crocodilensis – B. dartevellei – B. deguidei – B. deserti – B. devosi – B. dialonensis – B. diamouanganai – B. ditinensis – B. dorsolineatus – B. eburneensis – B. elephantis – B. ensis – B. erythrozonus – B. ethiopicus – B. eurystomus – B. eutaenia – B. evansi – B. fasciolatus – B. fasolt – B. figuiguensis – B. foutensis – B. fritschii – B. gananensis – B. gestetneri – B. girardi – B. greenwoodi – B. gruveli – B. grypus – B. guildi – B. guineensis – B. guirali – B. gulielmi – B. gurneyi – B. haasianus – B. harterti – B. holotaenia – B. hondeensis – B. huguenyi – B. huloti – B. hulstaerti – B. humeralis – B. humilis – B. inaequalis – B. innocens – B. iturii – B. jacksoni – B. jae – B. janssensi – B. jubbi – B. kamolondoensis – B. kerstenii – B. kessleri – B. kissiensis – B. kubanicus – B. kuiluensis – B. labiosa – B. lagensis – B. lamani – B. laticeps – B. lauzannei – B. leonensis – B. leptopogon – B. liberiensis – B. lineomaculatus – B. longifilis – B. lornae – B. loveridgii – B. luapulae – B. lufukiensis – B. luikae – B. lujae – B. lukindae – B. lukusiensis – B. luluae – B. machadoi – B. macinensis – B. macroceps – B. macrolepis – B. macrops – B. macrotaenia – B. magdalenae – B. manicensis – B. mariae – B. marmoratus – B. martorelli – B. matthesi – B. mattozi – B. mawambi – B. mawambiensis – B. mediosquamatus – B. melanotaenia – B. microbarbis – B. microterolepis – B. mimus – B. miolepis – B. mirabilis – B. mocoensis – B. mohasicus – B. motebensis – B. multilineatus – B. musumbi – B. myersi – B. nanningsi – B. neefi – B. neglectus – B. neumayeri – B. nigeriensis – B. nigrifilis – B. nigroluteus – B. niokoloensis – B. nounensis – B. nyanzae – B. oligogrammus – B. oligolepis – B. olivaceus – B. owenae – B. oxyrhynchus – B. pagenstecheri – B. pallidus – B. paludinosus – B. papilio – B. parablabes – B. parajae – B. parawaldroni – B. paucisquamatus – B. paytonii – B. pellegrini – B. pergamonensis – B. perince – B. petchkovskyi – B. petitjeani – B. platyrhinus – B. pleurogramma – B. pobeguini – B. poechii – B. prionacanthus – B. profundus – B. pseudotoppini – B. pumilus – B. punctitaeniatus – B. pygmaeus – B. quadrilineatus – B. quadripunctatus – B. radiatus – B. raimbaulti – B. rapax – B. rebeli – B. reinii – B. rhinophorus – B. rohani – B. rosae – B. roussellei – B. rouxi – B. ruasae – B. rubrostigma – B. sacratus – B. salessei – B. salmo – B. sensitivus – B. serengetiensis – B. serra – B. setivimensis – B. sexradiatus – B. seymouri – B. somereni – B. sperchiensis – B. stanleyi – B. stappersii – B. stauchi – B. stigmasemion – B. stigmatopygus – B. strumicae – B. subinensis – B. sublineatus – B. sylvaticus – B. syntrechalepis – B. taeniopleura – B. taeniurus – B. tanapelagius – B. tangandensis – B. tegulifer – B. tetraspilus – B. tetrastigma – B. teugelsi – B. thamalakanensis – B. thessalus – B. thysi – B. tiekoroi – B. tomiensis – B. tongaensis – B. toppini – B. trachypterus – B. traorei – B. treurensis – B. trimaculatus – B. trinotatus – B. trispiloides – B. trispilomimus – B. trispilopleura – B. trispilos – B. tropidolepis – B. turkanae – B. unitaeniatus – B. urostigma – B. urotaenia – B. usambarae – B. vanderysti – B. venustus – B. viktorianus – B. viviparus – B. waleckii – B. walkeri – B. wellmani – B. wurtzi – B. yeiensis – B. yongei – B. zalbiensis – B. zanzibaricus
Name

Barbus Daudin, 1805
References

Berrebi, P. 1998. Genetic divergence among morphotypes of Lake Tana (Ethiopia) barbs. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 64: 369–384. DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.1998.tb00338.x Open access. Reference page.
Berrebi, P., Kottelat, M., Skelton, P. & Rab, P. 1996. Systematics of Barbus: State of the art and heuristic comments. Folia Zoologica 45: 5–12. Reference page.
Doadrio, I. 1990. Phylogenetic relationships and classification of western palearctic species of the genus Barbus (Osteichthyes, Cyprinidae). Aquatic Living Resources 3(4): 265–282. DOI: 10.1051/alr:1990028 Paywall. Reference page.

Additional references

Bamba, M., Vreven, E.J. & Snoeks, J. 2011. Description of Barbus teugelsi sp. nov. (Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae) from the Little Scarcies basin in Guinea, Africa. Zootaxa 2998(1): 48–65. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2998.1.4 Paywall Reference page.
Turan, D., Kaya, C., Geiger, M. & Freyhof, J. 2018. Barbus anatolicus, a new barbel from the Kızılırmak and Yeşilırmak River drainages in northern Anatolia (Teleostei: Cyprinidae). Zootaxa 4461(4): 539–557. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4461.4.5 Paywall Reference page.
Turan, D., Kottelat, M. & Güler Ekmekçi, F. 2009. Barbus niluferensis, a new species of barbel (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) from Nilüfer River, Turkey, with re-description of B. oligolepis. Zootaxa 1981(1): 15–28. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.1981.1.2 Paywall. Reference page.

Vernacular names
català: Barb
Deutsch: Barben
English: Barbs
հայերեն: Բեղլու
македонски: Мрена
українська: Марена

Barbus hexastichus

Barbus hexastichus

Barbus is a genus of ray-finned fish in the family Cyprinidae. The type species of Barbus is the common barbel, first described as Cyprinus barbus and now named Barbus barbus. Barbus is the namesake genus of the subfamily Barbinae, but given their relationships, that taxon is better included in the Cyprininae at least for the largest part (including the type species of Barbus).
Description and uses

Their common names – barbs and barbels – refer to the fact that most members of the genera have a pair of barbels on their mouths, which they can use to search for food at the bottom of the water.

Barbels are often fished for food; in some locations they are of commercial significance. The roe of barbels is poisonous, however. The large Barbus barbs are also often eaten in their native range.

The smaller barbs are in some cases traded as aquarium fish. Some are quite significant, but as a whole, the genus is not yet as well represented in aquaria as the Southeast Asian Puntius.[3]
Systematics and taxonomy

Barbus has a long history as a "wastebasket taxon". Historically, most fish commonly known as "barbs" were usually placed here by default. More recently, many "barbs" have been reclassified into genera such as Arabibarbus, Barbichthys, Barbodes, Barboides, Barbonymus, Barbopsis, Caecobarbus, Capoeta, Carasobarbus, Clypeobarbus, Enteromius, Hypselobarbus, Hypsibarbus, Labeobarbus, Leptobarbus, Luciobarbus, Mesopotamichthys, Poropuntius, Probarbus, Pseudobarbus, Puntioplites and Puntius.[4]

Thus, Barbus is for the time being restricted to typical barbels, and only contains fishes from Africa and Europe, as well as adjacent Asia. However, the genus even in the reduced version is probably paraphyletic, and many African species (particularly the small ones) do not seem to belong here, either. Eventually, Barbus is likely to be restricted to the group around B. barbus – the large European to Ponto-Caspian species commonly known as "barbels". Luciobarbus and particularly Messinobarbus are highly similar and might better be included in Barbus again. They all seem to be close relatives – perhaps the closest living relatives – of Aulopyge huegelii. Carasobarbus and Labeobarbus are probably closely related to this group, too, and some large hexaploid barbs (e.g. L. reinii) may well belong in Labeobarbus.

The small barbs from Africa, by contrast, are quite distinct. They might even warrant establishment of a new subfamily – in particular if the Labeoninae are not included in the Cyprininae –, as they seem to be as distinct from barbels and typical carps, as these are from the garras (which are part of the disputed Labeoninae), rendering the old "Barbinae" paraphyletic. Within the small African barbs, several lineages can be recognized. These are mostly diploid; a tetraploid group largely restricted to southern Africa is very close to Pseudobarbus and might even be included therein. In particular, the group called "redfins" may well be monophyletic and belong in Pseudobarbus entirely, instead of being split between Pseudobarbus and Barbus.
Species

There are currently 36 recognized species of this genus:[5]

Barbus balcanicus Kotlík, Tsigenopoulos, Ráb & Berrebi, 2002 (Danube barbel)
Barbus barbus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Common barbel)
Barbus bergi Chichkoff, 1935 (Bulgarian barbel)
Barbus biharicus Antal, László & Kotlík, 2016 (Biharian barbel) [6]
Barbus borysthenicus Dybowski, 1862
Barbus caninus Bonaparte, 1839 (brook barbel)
Barbus carottae (Bianco, 1998) (Yliki barbel)
Barbus carpathicus Kotlík, Tsigenopoulos, Ráb & Berrebi, 2002 (Carpathian barbel)
Barbus ciscaucasicus Kessler, 1877 (Terek barbel)
Barbus cyclolepis Heckel, 1837
Barbus cyri De Filippi, 1865 (Kura barbel)
Barbus euboicus Stephanidis, 1950 (Evia barbel)
Barbus fucini Costa, 1853
Barbus haasi Mertens, 1925 (Catalonian barbel)
Barbus karunensis Khaefi, Esmaeili, Geiger & Eagderi, 2017 (Karun barbel)
Barbus kubanicus L. S. Berg, 1913 (Kuban barbel)
Barbus lacerta Heckel, 1843 (lizard barbel)
Barbus lorteti Sauvage, 1882 (Lortet's barbel)
Barbus macedonicus S. L. Karaman, 1928
Barbus meridionalis A. Risso, 1827 (Mediterranean barbel)
Barbus miliaris De Filippi, 1863
Barbus niluferensis Turan, Kottelat & Ekmekçi, 2009 (Simav barbel)
Barbus oligolepis Battalgil, 1941 (Marmara barbel)
Barbus peloponnesius Valenciennes, 1842
Barbus pergamonensis M. S. Karaman, 1971 (Anatolian barbel)
Barbus petenyi Heckel, 1852 (Romanian barbel)
Barbus plebejus Bonaparte, 1839 (Italian barbel)
Barbus prespensis S. L. Karaman, 1924
Barbus rebeli Koller, 1926 (Western Balkan barbel)
Barbus samniticus Lorenzoni, Carosi, Quadroni, De Santis, Vanetti, Delmastro & Zaccara, 2021
Barbus sperchiensis Stephanidis, 1950 (Sperchios barbel)
Barbus strumicae S. L. Karaman, 1955 (Strumica barbel)
Barbus tauricus Kessler, 1877 (Crimean barbel)
Barbus thessalus Stephanidis, 1971 (Thessalian barbel)
Barbus tyberinus Bonaparte, 1839 (Horse barbel)
Barbus waleckii Rolik, 1970 (Vistula barbel)

Fossil species

A fossil species (Barbus megacephalus Günther, 1876) is known from the Paleogene Sipang Fauna of Indonesia.,[7] but it probably should be placed in another genus.
See also

Danionins

References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Barbus.

Skelton, P. H., Swartz, E. R., & Vreven, E. J. (2018). The identity of Barbus capensis Smith, 1841 and the generic status of southern African tetraploid cyprinids (Teleostei, Cyprinidae). European Journal of Taxonomy, (410). https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2018.410
Englmaier GK, Tesfaye G, Bogutskaya NG (2020) A new species of Enteromius (Actinopterygii, Cyprinidae, Smiliogastrinae) from the Awash River, Ethiopia, and the re-establishment of E. akakianus. ZooKeys 902: 107-150. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.902.39606
Lambert, D.J. (1997): Freshwater Aquarium Fish. Chartwell Books, Edison, New Jersey, USA. ISBN 0-7858-0867-1
Banister, K.E. (1973): A revision of the large Barbus (Pisces, Cyprinidae) of East and Central Africa. Studies on African Cyprinidae. Part II. Bulletin of the British Museum, 26 (1): 3-148.
Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2024). Species of Barbus in FishBase. July 2024 version.
Antal, L., László, B., Kotlík, P., Mozsár, A., Czeglédi, I., Oldal, M., Kemenesi, G., Jakab, F. & Nagy, S.A. (2015): Phylogenetic evidence for a new species of Barbus in the Danube River basin. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 96: 187–194.
Woodward, A.S. (1901). Catalogue of the Fossil Fishes in the British Museum (Natural History). order of the Trustees. p. 302. "barbus megacephalus."

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