Cryptotora thamicola occupies a unique position in vertebrate biology as the only known fish species that walks using a tetrapod-like gait — a discovery made in 2016 that sent shockwaves through the scientific community. It achieves this by using robust pelvic girdle anatomy convergently similar to that of early land-walking vertebrates, allowing it to clamber over wet cave surfaces. It is naturally found in fast-flowing underground waterways in western Thailand, where it is adapted to complete darkness and perpetual waterfall spray.
Blind and essentially unpigmented, C. thamicola relies entirely on mechanosensory systems to navigate its cave environment. In captivity it must be kept in dim or dark conditions; exposure to bright aquarium lighting causes chronic stress. The species requires the fast-flowing, well-oxygenated, clean water typical of hillstream habitats, but at somewhat warmer temperatures than surface hillstream species owing to the stable thermal nature of Thai cave systems.
This species is listed as Endangered and export from Thailand is restricted. Any specimens appearing in the trade should be verified as legally obtained captive-bred or legally exported stock. It is primarily a scientific and conservation species rather than a display animal, though its extraordinary biology makes it uniquely fascinating for dedicated keepers.