taxonID	type	description	language	source
7F3C5672FF9E2D55FF39BDF063E6EFBD.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype. ZFMK 103019, female, 53.5 mm SL; Iraq: stream Zalm south of Taparezina, 35 ° 18 ' 23 " N 45 ° 58 ' 14 " E; J. Freyhof, H. A. Raza & M. Qadir, 7 Jun 2012. Paratypes. FSJF 3360, 23, 40 – 54 mm SL; same data as holotype. — FSJF 3361, 10, 40 – 57 mm SL; Iraq: Shiramer spring in Shiramer, 35 ° 19 ' 03 " N 46 ° 00 ' 44 " E; J. Freyhof, H. A. Raza & M. Qadir, 7 Jun 2012.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF9E2D55FF39BDF063E6EFBD.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Oxynoemacheilus gyndes is distinguished from all Oxynoemacheilus species in the Tigris drainage by having a very short lateral line, reaching slightly behind the pectoral-fin base, not reaching the vertical through the dorsal-fin origin (vs. reaching under the dorsal-fin base or above the anal-fin base in O. frenatus and O. kiabii; lateral line complete in O. chomanicus, O. parvinae, O. zagrosensis, O. bergianus, O. euphraticus, O. longipinnis, O. karunensis and O. kurdistanicus) and its peculiar colour pattern. Oxynoemacheilus gyndes has a midlateral series of small, horizontally elongated, dark-brown blotches often fused into an irregularly-shaped midlateral stripe, one additional stripe above and below the midlateral stripe in many individuals (vs. flank mottled or with vertically elongated, irregularly shapes blotches or bars in other species from the Tigris). Oxynoemacheilus gyndes is further distinguished from O. bergianus, O. euphraticus, O. longipinnis, O. parvinae, O. karunensis and O. kurdistanicus by lacking a suborbital groove in males (vs. present) and a slightly emarginate or truncate caudal fin (vs. deeply emarginate or forked). It should be noted that Kanmangar et al. (2014) did not mention a suborbital groove in O. kurdistanicus but all males examined by us, even those from close to the type locality (FSJF 3643), collected in October, have such a groove.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF9E2D55FF39BDF063E6EFBD.taxon	description	Oxynoemacheilus gyndes is further distinguished from O. frenatus by the absence of a shallow groove in the middle of the upper lip (vs. present) and by having longer barbels (maxillary barbel reaching vertical of posterior eye margin vs. reaching vertical of anterior eye margin or middle of eye). Similar to O. kiabii, O. gyndes lack a central pore in the supratemporal canal (vs. present in O. chomanicus, O. frenatus and O. zagrosensis) and O. gyndes lack scales except at the very back of the caudal peduncle (vs. scales present on flank in O. frenatus, O. chomanicus and O. zagrosensis as well as in O. bergianus, O. euphraticus, O. longipinnis, O. parvinae, O. karunensis and O. kurdistanicus). Oxynoemacheilus gyndes is distinguished from O. kiabii by having a very different colour pattern (a midlateral series of small, horizontally elongated, dark-brown blotches often fused to an irregularly shaped midlateral stripe vs. distinct, large and vertically elongated blotches on flank) and a much shorter head (head length 22 – 26 % SL vs. 26 – 30). Description. For general appearance see Figs. 1 – 4; morphometric data are provided in Table 2. Small and stout species with a blunt head. Body deepest at nape, at dorsal-fin origin or about midline between nape and dorsal-fin origin, depth decreasing continuously towards caudal-fin base. A prominent hump at nape in some individuals. Greatest body width at pectoral-fin base. Section of head roundish, flattened on ventral surface. Caudal peduncle compressed laterally, 1.1 – 1.4 (mean 1.2) times longer than deep. A small, ovoid axillary lobe at base of pelvic fin, fully attached to body or pelvic axillary lobe absent. Pelvic-fin origin below second or third branched dorsal-fin ray. Anal-fin origin at vertical of middle or behind middle between base of last dorsal-fin ray and caudalfin origins. Pectoral fin reaching approximately 50 – 80 % of distance from pectoral-fin origin to pelvic-fin origin. Pelvic fin reaching vertical of dorsal-fin tip, not reaching to anus. Anus about one 0.3 – 0.6 eye diameter in front of anal-fin origin. Anal fin not reaching caudal-fin base. Short and shallow dorsal and ventral adipose crest on caudal peduncle. Dorsal crest reaching to vertical of anus or a point behind. Margin of dorsal fin convex. Caudal fin slightly emarginate. Largest known specimen 57 mm SL. Dorsal fin with 8 – 9 ½ branched rays. Anal fin with 5 ½ branched rays. Caudal fin with 8 + 8 (n = 15) branched rays, 5 – 7 branched rays in upper lobe in few malformed individuals. Pectoral fin with 10 – 12 and pelvic fin with 6 – 7 rays. Body naked except very back part of caudal peduncle, which is covered by small, isolated and embedded scales. Lateral line incomplete, reaching slightly behind pectoral-fin base, not reaching vertical of dorsal-fin origin. Three or four lateral pores and no central pore in supratemporal canal. In one individual, four lateral pores on one side and three on other side in supratemporal canal. Anterior nostril opening at end of a low, pointed and flap-like tube. Posterior tip of anterior nostril reaching to posterior nostril when folded backwards. No suborbital groove in males. Mouth large, slightly arched (Fig. 5). Lips thick, with poorly marked furrows. A deep median interruption in lower lip. No median incision in upper lip. Processus dentiformis wide and shallow. No median notch in lower jaw. Barbels long, inner rostral barbel reaching to or almost to base of maxillary barbel; outer one reaching to vertical of anterior margin of eye or to anterior half of eye. Maxillary barbel reaching vertical of posterior margin of eye. Male with longer pectoral fin, covered with many small unculi on dorsal surface of unbranched and branched rays 1 – 3, no suborbital groove or flap. Coloration. Body yellowish in life and preserved individuals. Head with large, dark-brown spots, plain brown mottling on top, cheeks with fine dark-brown spots or mottled, without colour pattern ventrally. A wide, darkbrown or black band between base of anterior rostral barbel and anterior eye margin. No pigmentation below a line from pectoral-fin base to anus. Back dark-brown or pale-brown with a mid-dorsal dark brown zone, often with small blotches or a black margin. A large, irregularly shaped, dark-brown blotch at dorsal fin-origin. Flank with 7 – 11 large, dark-brown, horizontally elongated blotches along lateral midline. Blotches often fused, partly or completely, to a midlateral stripe. Stipe usually narrow. Flank below lateral stripe or series of blotches with a fine marbled patter or with a second stripe, less prominent then the midlateral one. A third irregularly shaped line of dark brown pigments between pelvic-fin origin and caudal-fin base in most individuals, absent in others. Flank above midlateral stripe or row of blotches with a second row of horizontally elongated blotches, usually faded into a pale-brown pattern on flank in front of dorsal fin origin or dissociated into irregularly shaped, narrow dark brown horizontal lines. Upper part of caudal peduncle with 3 – 5 irregularly shaped blotches, fused with midlateral blotches in some individuals. Two roundish or half-moon shaped dark-brown blotches at posterior extremity of caudal peduncle, rarely fused in middle, not reaching ventral and dorsal midline. Last unbranched dorsal-fin ray with a black spot at about midlength of ray. Dorsal-fins 5 – 7 with and Caudal fin 6 – 10 with fine, irregularly shapes darkbrown bands on rays. Anal-, pelvic- and pectoral fins with many very small spots or elongated blotches on rays or with few dark-brown spots on rays.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF9E2D55FF39BDF063E6EFBD.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Oxynoemacheilus gyndes was found in headwater streams (Fig. 12) of the upper Sirwan (Kurdish) drainage [Sirvan (Persian) or Diyala (Arabic)] in Iraqi Kurdistan. Beside the places mentioned above, it was also found in a stream at the village Saraw (35 ° 22 ' 20 " N 45 ° 50 ' 06 " E). The Sirvan is a left side tributary of the Tigris flowing down from the Zagros Mountains.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF9E2D55FF39BDF063E6EFBD.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The species is named for the Sirvan River. The Sirvan was known by Herodotus of Halicarnassus, the famous Greek historian (484 – c. 425 BC) under the name Gyndes. Herodotus named it in his “ Histories, first book, account on the fall of Babylon ” the western world's first historical study. A noun in genitive, indeclinable.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype. ZFMK 103020, male, 57 mm SL; Iraq: stream Zalm south of Taparezina, 35 ° 18 ' 23 " N 45 ° 58 ' 14 " E; J. Freyhof, H. A. Raza & M. Qadir, 7 Jun 2012. Paratypes. FSJF 3359, 22, 46 – 61 mm SL; same data as holotype. — FSJF 3641, 63, 34 – 61 mm SL; Iraq: stream Zalm south of Taparezina, 35 ° 18 ' 23 " N 45 ° 58 ' 14 " E; J. Freyhof, Y. S. Abdullah & M. Musa, 23 Oct 2016.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Oxynoemacheilus hanae is distinguished from the other species of Oxynoemacheilus in the Tigris drainage by a combination of characters, none of them unique. Oxynoemacheilus hanae belongs to a group of species (O. bergianus, O. euphraticus, O. longipinnis, O. karunensis, O. kurdistanicus, O. parvinae) having a suborbital groove in males (vs. absent in O. chomanicus, O. frenatus, O. gyndes, O. kiabii and O. zagrosensis) and a deeply emarginate caudal fin (vs. slightly emarginate or truncate in O. chomanicus, O. frenatus, O. gyndes, O. kiabii and O. zagrosensis). Oxynoemacheilus hanae was found in sympatry with O. gyndes and O. kurdistanicus (Fig. 11) and O. parvinae is known from the upper Sirvan drainage.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	description	Oxynoemacheilus hanae is distinguished from O. euphraticus and O. kurdistanicus by having no or a very short incision in the upper lip (vs. a deep median incision), a series of dark-brown roundish or ovoid blotches along the midlateral flank (vs. narrow and regularly or irregularly set and shaped bars at least on the flank behind the caudal-fin base), the midlateral blotches not reaching down to ventral side of caudal peduncle (vs. reaching), the midlateral blotches are usually not confluent with the saddles on the back, but often overlapping (vs. bars on the flank behind the dorsal-fin-base usually confluent with saddles on the back). A few individuals of O. hanae have one or two midlateral blotches being vertically elongated, forming a bar and rarely this bar is then connected to a saddle on the back. Also, O. hanae has a horizontal series of isolated patches of brown blotches or a row of small, brown spots below the midlateral blotches (vs. lower flank without colour pattern or colour pattern of midlateral flank reaching down to lower flank) and the caudal peduncle is 1.4 – 1.8 times longer than deep vs. 1.9 – 2.2 in sympatric O. kurdistanicus. Oxynoemacheilus hanae is distinguished from O. karunensis by the two black blotches or spots at the caudalfin base usually being invisible in life, indistinct and overlaid by a chevron-shaped, dark-brown or black bar (vs. prominent in life and preserved fishes), the flank below the lateral series of blotches without colour pattern except a longitudinal series of isolated patches of blotches or a row of small dark-brown spots (vs. lower flank with irregularly shaped and set brown blotches forming a continuous pattern with lateral and dorsal flank pattern), lacking minute dark-brown spots on the back, above the lateral midline and the caudal peduncle (vs. present) and having a small but well developed pelvic axillary lobe fully attached to the body (vs. no lobe or lobe rudimentary, shallow and knob-shaped). Oxynoemacheilus hanae is distinguished from O. bergianus, O. longipinnis and O. parvinae by having two bold, black blotches or spots on the caudal-fin base, usually overlaid by a chevron-shaped, dark-brown or black bar (vs. no bold, black pattern on the caudal-fin base in O. bergianus, O. longipinnis and O. parvinae), flank below lateral series of blotches with isolated patches of blotches or a row of small dark-brown spots (vs. lower flank without colour pattern or colour pattern of midlateral flank reaching down to lower flank) and a deeper caudal peduncle (its length 1.4 – 1.8 times in it depth vs. 1.7 – 2.2 in O. longipinnis and 2.3 – 3.1 in O. bergianus). Description. For general appearance see Figs. 6 – 9; morphometric data are provided in Table 3. Middle sized and elongate species with a short and blunt head. Body deepest at dorsal-fin origin or about midline between nape and dorsal-fin origin, depth decreasing almost constant towards caudal-fin base. No hump at nape. Greatest body width at pectoral-fin base. Section of head roundish, flattened on ventral surface. Caudal peduncle compressed laterally, 1.4 – 1.8 times longer than deep. A small, usually triangular axillary lobe at base of pelvic fin, usually fully attached to body, rarely with free posterior tip. Pelvic-fin origin below first or second branched dorsal-fin ray. Anal-fin origin slightly behind vertical of middle between dorsal- and caudal-fin origins. Pectoral fin reaching approximately 70 – 90 % of distance from pectoral-fin origin to pelvic-fin origin. Pelvic fin not reaching vertical of tip of last dorsal-fin ray when folded down, reaching to anus or to a short distance in front of anus. Anus about 0.5 – 1.0 eye diameter in front of anal-fin origin. Anal fin not reaching caudal-fin base. No dorsal or ventral adipose crest on caudal peduncle. Margin of dorsal fin concave. Caudal fin deeply emarginate. Largest known specimen 61 mm SL. Dorsal fin with 8 ½ branched rays. Anal fin with 5 ½ branched rays. Caudal fin with 9 + 8 branched rays. Pectoral fin with 10 – 11 and pelvic fin with 8 rays. Body covered by embedded scales. Lateral line complete, reaching to caudal-fin base. One or two lateral and one central pores in supratemporal canal. Anterior nostril opening at end of a low, pointed and flap-like tube. Posterior tip of anterior nostril overlapping posterior nostril when folded backwards. A suborbital groove in males. Mouth small, arched (Fig. 10). Lips thick, with poorly marked furrows. A deep median interruption in lower lip. No or a very short median incision in upper lip. Processus dentiformis narrow and blunt. No median notch in lower jaw. Barbels long, inner rostral barbel reaching to base of maxillary barbel; outer one reaching to vertical of anterior margin of eye or to anterior half of eye. Maxillary barbel reaching vertical to posterior half of eye. Male with longer pectoral fin, covered with many small unculi on dorsal surface of unbranched and branched rays 1 – 3 and a shallow suborbital groove, almost completely continuous with surrounding skin in some individuals. Coloration. Body yellowish in life and preserved individuals. Head plain brown on top or with mottled pattern, cheeks with fine dark-brown spots or mottled pattern, without colour pattern ventrally. No pigmentation below a line from pectoral-fin base to anus. Back dark- or pale-brown with two, rarely one wide, dark-brown saddles, wider than interspaces and fused to lateral bars or blotches in few individuals. A large, roundish, dark brown blotch at dorsal fin-origin and below posterior half or dorsal-fin base. No, one or two narrow dark-brown saddles on upper caudal peduncle, usually fused with blotches or bars on flank. Flank with a bold dark-brown inner axial stripe and 5 – 8, epidermal, large, dark-brown, irregularly shaped, horizontally elongated blotches along lateral midline, individual blotches vertically elongated to short bars in few individuals. Blotches often fused, not forming a stripe, not reaching to belly or to ventral side on caudal peduncle. Flank below lateral series of blotches with isolated patches of blotches or a row of small dark-brown spots, absent in two out of 80 individuals. Flank above midlateral row of blotches mottled, in front of a vertical of last dorsal-fin ray often with a depigmented stripe between midlateral blotches and blotches on back. Chevron shaped bar at caudal fin base, dissociated into a large lower blotch and a small spot or into two, usually indistinct spots in few individuals, usually fused to the last midlateral blotch. Two black blotches on caudal-fin base in some individuals overlaid by chevron-shaped bar. In preserved or stressed fishes, overlaid colour pattern might fade and two black blotches become visible. Last unbranched dorsal-fin ray with a black spot at about midlength of ray. Dorsal- and caudal-fins with a tessellated pattern on rays. Anal-, pelvic- and pectoral fins usually hyaline, with few dark-brown spots on rays in some individuals.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Oxynoemacheilus hanae was found in a headwater stream (Fig. 12) of the upper Sirwan (Kurdish) drainage [Sirvan (Persian) or Diyala (Arabic)] in Iraq. Besides the type locality, it was also found in a stream at the village Saraw (35 ° 22 ' 20 " N 45 ° 50 ' 06 " E). The Sirvan is a left side tributary of the Tigris flowing down from the Zagros Mountains.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The species is named for Hana A. Raza who works for Nature Iraq in Sulaymaniyah. Hana accompanied JF during fieldwork in Iraqi Kurdistan. A noun in genitive, indeclinable.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	materials_examined	Comparative material. Additional materials of Oxynoemacheilus species examined other than those below are listed by Freyhof et al. (2012) and Freyhof (2016). Oxynoemacheilus bergianus: FSJF 3212, 6, 40 – 50 mm SL; Iran: Gilan prov.: Ghezel – ozan River, a tributary to Sefid River. — FSJF 3216, 3, 38 – 58 Iran: Guilan prov.: Lower Sefid River below dam at Shar Bijar, 37 ° 01 ' 13.65 '' N 49 ° 37 ' 51.80 '' E. — FSJF 3227, 12, 38 – 52 mm SL; Iran: Qom prov.: Qom River southwest of Shashme Ali, 34 ° 21 ' 11.25 " N 50 ° 32 ' 52.66 " E. — FSJF 3230, 46, 32 – 46 mm SL; Iran: Albroz prov.: Kordan River near Karaj city, 35 ° 57 ' 11 '' N 50 ° 50 ' 15 '' E. — FSJF 3249, 5, 31 – 61 mm SL; Iran: Ardabil prov.: Yalekhlou River, a tributary of Lake Urmia, 38 ° 00 ' 8.95 " N 47 ° 46 ' 6.34 " E. — FSJF 2923, 2, 45 – 61 mm SL; Turkey: Batman prov.: stream Sason between Çatakköprü and Sason, 38.2622 N 41.2591 E. — FSJF 2873, 1, 56 mm SL; Turkey: Elazığ prov.: Tigris 5 km north of Maden, 38.4157 N 39.6531 E.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
7F3C5672FF992D5DFF39BE5D6703E946.taxon	description	Oxynoemacheilus chomanicus: FSJF 3644, 5, 33 – 61 mm SL; Iraq: Choman River at Alut, 35 ° 57 ' 23 " N 45 ° 36 ' 56 " E. Oxynoemacheilus euphraticus: ZMH 1889, holotype of Nemacheilus insignis euphraticus, 29 mm SL; ZMH 1890, 20 paratypes of N. i. euphraticus, 24 – 36 mm SL; Turkey: Malatya. — FSJF 1990, 24, 25 – 61 mm SL; Turkey: Mus prov.: stream Page at Yaygin, about 30 km west of Mus, 38 ° 55 ' N 41 ° 16 ' E. — FSJF 1996, 5, 36 – 55 mm SL; Turkey: Elazig prov.: stream at village Karakocan, at street from Elazig to Bingöl, 38 ° 57 ' N 40 ° 01 ' E. — FSJF 2636, 20, 35 – 60 mm SL; Turkey: Adıyaman prov.: upper River Göksu, 5 km northeast of Gölbaşı, 37 ° 50.217 N 37 ° 41.088 E. — FSJF 2910, 26, 28 – 66 mm SL; Turkey: Sivas prov.: stream Kangal under railway bridge at Çetinkaya, 39.2516 N 37.6189 E. — FSJF 3376, 31, 34.8 – 73.6 mm SL; Iraq: Rezan River near Ziraran, a tributary to Greater Zab River, 36 ° 56.60 ' N 44 ° 11.72 ' E. Oxynoemacheilus frenatus: NMW 48552, 5 syntypes, 26 – 70 mm SL; NMW 15477, 1 syntype; 43 mm SL; Iraq: Tigris River at Mosul. — FSJF 2534, 19, 41 – 67 mm SL; Turkey: Diyabakır prov.: stream Göksu below Göksu dam, south of Çınar at road from Diyabakır to Mardin, Tigris drainage, 37 ° 41.56 '' N 40 ° 26.87 '' E. — FSJF 2614, 3, 44 – 75 mm SL; Turkey: Diyabakır prov.: River Tigris south of Diyabakır, 37 ° 53.230 N 40 ° 13.788 E. — FSJF 2844, 1, 39 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: stream Ambar at road to Silvan, 25 km east of Diyarbakır, 37.9902 N 40.3824 E. — FSJF 2874, 2, 45 – 50 mm SL; Turkey: Elazığ prov.: Tigris five km north of Maden, 38.4157 N 39.6531 E. — FSJF 2946, 25, 31 – 53 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: Spring of Pamuk at Kocaköy, 38.2721. N 40.5628 E. — FSJF 2952, 1, 42 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: stream Bağlıca between Bismil and Tepe, 37.8084 N 40.7169 E. — FSJF 2954, 4, 48 – 59 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: stream Savur between Bayındır and Ahmetli, east of Tepe, 37.7637 N 40.8839 E. Oxynoemacheilus karunensis: FSJF 3525, 8, 33 – 55 mm SL; Iran: Hamadan prov.: Gamasiab River at Do Ab, 34 ° 22 ' 20.76 " N 47 ° 55 ' 00.1 " E. — FSJF 3523, 6, 34 – 51 mm SL; Iran: Hamadan prov.: Haram Abad River at Ashmizan, 34 ° 06 ' 37.7 " N 48 ° 52 ' 13.55 " E. — FSJF 3524, 7, 37 – 53 mm SL; Hamadan prov.: Dehno stream about 2 km south-west of Nahavand, 34 ° 10 ' 08.7 " N 48 ° 21 ' 11.52 " E. — FSJF 3526, 2, 30 – 40 mm SL; Iran: Hamadan prov.: Gamasiab River at Chesme Mahi, 34 ° 20 ' 17.6 " N 48 ° 01 ' 56.6 " E. — SMF IR 7, 3, 36 – 44 mm SL; Iran: Khozestan prov.: Marun River near Behbehan, 30 ° 39 ' 24 '' N 50 ° 11 ' 18 '' E. Oxynoemacheilus kiabii: FSJF 3003, 7, 34 –– 53 mm SL; Iran: Hamadan prov.: stream Dehnoo, 3 km west of Nahavand on the road from Nahavand toward Sarab-e- Gamasiab, 34 ° 10 ' N 48 ° 24 ' E. — FSJF 3004, 2, 38 – 44 mm SL; Iran: Hamadan prov.: stream Babarostam, a tributary of Gamasiab River, 34 ° 10 ' 18 ” N 48 ° 21 ' 23 ” E. Oxynoemacheilus kurdistanicus: FSJF 2843, 1, 47 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: stream Ambar at road to Silvan, 25 km east of Diyarbakır, 37.9902 N 40.3824 E. — FSJF 2875, 36, 27 – 69 mm SL; Turkey: Elazığ prov.: Tigris 5 km north of Maden, 38.4157 N 39.6531 E. — FSJF 2945, 6, 30 – 68 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: Spring of Pamuk at Kocaköy, 38.2721. N 40.5628 E. — FSJF 2951, 12, 44 – 54 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: stream Bağlıca between Bismil and Tepe, 37.8084 N 40.7169 E. — FSJF 2957, 5, 49 – 54 mm SL; Turkey: Diyarbakır prov.: stream Savur between Bayındır and Ahmetli east of Tepe, 37.7637 N 40.8839 E. — FSJF 3369, 28, 40 – 61 mm SL; Iraq: Nalparez River 35 ° 34.24 ' N 45 ° 51.78 ' E. — FSJF 3347, 25, 50 – 62 mm SL; Iraq: stream north-west of Saburawa, a tributary of Tabin River, 35 ° 50 ' 01 '' N 45 ° 06 ' 16 '' E. — FSJF 3353, 9, 40 – 61 mm SL; Iraq: stream Kuna Massi in Sevanja, 35 ° 47.35 ' N 45 ° 24.18 ' E. — FSJF 3373, 54, 35 – 62 mm SL; Iraq: stream Suraw near Suraw village, 35 ° 45.76 ' N 45 ° 59.09 ' E. — FSJF 3642, 7, 39 – 48 mm SL; Iraq: stream Zalm south of Taparezina, 35 ° 18 ' 23 " N 45 ° 58 ' 14 " E. — FSJF 3643, 15, 36 – 62 mm SL; Iraq: Choman River at Alut, 35 ° 57 ' 23 " N 45 ° 36 ' 56 " E. Oxynoemacheilus longipinnis: CMNFI 1979 - 0366, holotype, 36.0 mm SL; Iran: Meymeh River, 17 km west of Dehloran, about 21 kilometers east of Iraqi border, 32 ° 45 ' 30 " N, 47 ° 05 ' 30 " E. — CMNFI 1979 - 0365, 7, 32.0 – 40.5 mm SL; Iran: Khuzestan prov.: stream in Doveyrich drainage, 32 ° 25 " N 47 ° 36 ' 30 " E. Oxynoemacheilus parvinae: ZM-CBSU D 222, 54.4 mm SL; D 225, 58.2 mm SL; D 226, 36.7 mm SL; D 227, 59.0 mm SL; Iran: Kordestan prov.: Dehkan River at Abbas Abad, at road betwen Divandareh and Sanandaj, 35.525 N 47.094 E.	en	Freyhof, Jörg, Abdullah, Younis Sabir (2017): Two new species of Oxynoemacheilus from the Tigris drainage in Iraqi Kurdistan (Teleostei: Nemacheilidae). Zootaxa 4238 (1): 73-87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.1.5
