Pseudancistrus sidereus, a new species from southern Venezuela (Siluriformes: Loricariidae) with a redescription of Pseudancistrus
Author
Armbruster, Jonathan W.
text
Zootaxa
2004
628
1
15
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.158521
a05a8e80-dd49-4f21-a0de-ce330525a9c1
11755326
158521
C8D199F9-0677-41B1-ACD1-8A685EE26AE2
Pseudancistrus sidereus
new species
Fig. 3
Holotype
:
VENEZUELA
, Amazonas, Ro
Orinoco
dr.:
MCNG
26125, 175.6, Río Siapa from
10 to 15 km
downstream, Río Casiquiare – Río Negro dr., 01.50000°, 065.71667°, ABD and F. Morillo,
20 April 1991
.
Paratypes
.
VENEZUELA
, Amazonas, Río
Orinoco
dr.:
MCNG
48261, 1, 1CS, 149.8,
AUM
37562, 1, 148.7, same data as
holotype
.
FMNH
105294, 4, 149.5176.7, Río
Orinoco
ca. 5 h above Atabapo by falca; at rocks and beach, B. Chernoff, A. and D. Machado, and J. Wheeler,
23 January 1991
.
FIGURE 3
.
Pseudancistrus sidereus
,
MCNG 26125, 175.6 mm SL, holotype, dorsal, lateral, and ventral views. Photos by J.W. Armbruster.
Diagnosis
:
Pseudancistrus sidereus
is diagnosed by a unique modification of the ventral plates on the caudal peduncle. In loricariids, the plates of the ventral row on the caudal peduncle are typically bent at an approximately 90° angle to follow the contour of the body. The bend is often the site of a slight keel formed from one or more rows of slightly longer odontodes. In
P. sidereus
, the keel is accentuated by having the dorsal laminae of the plates strongly concave. Although some loricariids may have the dorsal laminae slightly concave, it is much more pronounced in
P. s i d e re u s
.
Pseudancistrus sidereus
can be separated from all other species of the
Ancistrini
by the presence of the keel mentioned above and by the presence of a single large white to yellow spot located at the center of the posterior lateral plates. The only species with a similar coloration are some
Hypancistrus
and some
Panaque
, both of which have far fewer than 25 teeth per jaw ramus (vs. much more than 25 teeth), some other species of
Pseudancistrus
which have hypertrophied odontodes along the snout in males and females (vs. no hypertrophied snout odontodes), and have the dorsal fin reaching at least the preadipose plate when depressed (vs. about two plates anterior to preadipose plate); and some
Hemiancistrus
and
Peckoltia
which generally have the spots much more diffuse (vs. borders of spots distinct) and have the dorsal fin reaching at least the preadipose plate when depressed (vs. about two plates anterior to preadipose plate).
Description.
Fairly large loricariids, largest specimen
176.7 mm
SL. Body elongate, fairly narrow, and dorsoventrally flattened. Head and anterior part of trunk gently sloped from snout tip to dorsalfin origin, dorsal profile of body straight to adipose fin with slight decrease in depth, dorsal profile of caudal peduncle very concave, shallowest at posterior insertion of adipose fin. Ventral surface flat.
Head contours smooth. Slight, rounded ridge from anterolateral corner of nares, above orbit to posterior edge of pteroticsupracleithrum, dorsal margin of orbit higher than mesial portion of head. Mesethmoid slightly higher than lateral surface of head forming rounded ridge on snout, continued posterior to mesethmoid and terminating at level of posterior margin of orbits. Supraoccipital with slight posterior point medially. Following head bones supporting odontodes: frontal, infraorbitals, opercle, nasal, pteroticsupracleithrum, sphenotic, supraoccipital, and suprapreopercle.
Lips wide, fairly thin. Upper lip with wide, thin papillae. Lower lip with small papillae anteriorly, a band of larger papillae, and then smaller papillae posteriorly, papillae fading towards posterior edge. Maxillary barbel only barbel present, not reaching base of evertible cheek plates. Mouth with small, narrow buccal papilla. Iris with small dorsal flap, not reaching ventral to center of pupil.
25 plates in median series. Ventral plates forming a right angle on caudal peduncle with dorsal margin of plates concave forming a strong keel along lower portion of caudal peduncle. Dorsal plate series bent between dorsal and adipose fins to form slight ridge, ridges on two sides converging just posterior to insertion of adiposefin spine. Inframedian plate series bent in middle from cleithrum to insertion of pelvicfin forming slight keel. Abdomen naked except for some small, embedded plates laterally between pectoral and pelvic fins. Five rows of plates on caudal peduncle.
18–39 (average = 28, N=7) evertible cheek odontodes. Evertible cheek odontodes fairly short, longest reaches posterodorsal corner of opercular opening. Evertible cheek odontodes supported by plates than can be everted up to approximately 90° from the head. Hypertrophied cheek odontodes relatively weak. Single adult male with modestly hypertrophied odontodes on tip of pectoralfin spine, females with odontodes on tip of pectoralfin spine slightly longer than those at base (
Fig. 3
).
All fin spines and rays supporting odontodes. Dorsal fin
II7
; dorsalfin spinelet Vshaped, dorsalfin lock functional; dorsalfin spine elongated relative to other fin rays in some specimens making edge of fin emarginate; dorsal fin not reaching adipose fin when adpressed. Adipose fin with single median preadipose plate and fairly long curved spine. Caudal fin
I14
I; caudal fin forked, lower lobe longer than upper; usually six dorsal and five ventral procurrent caudalfin spines. Pectoral fin
I6
; pectoralfin spine reaching posterior insertion of pelvic fin to slightly beyond base of pelvic fin when adpressed ventral to pelvic fin. Pelvic fin
I5
; pelvicfin spine reaching end of base of anal fin when adpressed. Anal fin
I4
; unbranched analfin spine ray two thirds the length of the first branched ray. First analfin pterygiophore not exposed to form a platelike structure.
Teeth very long and bicuspid with a longer, median lobe. 73–85 dentary teeth (median = 77, N=7). 78–93 premaxillary teeth (median = 84, N=7). Jaws very wide, dentaries forming a very oblique angle, premaxillaries forming a gentle arc.
Color.
Ground color dark brown dorsally and laterally, fading to tan on ventral half of inframedian plate series, tan ventrally. Head with small white spots (possibly yellow in life), spots getting larger posteriorly. Usually 2–3 spots per plate anteriorly and one posteriorly. Ventral spots lengthening dorsoventrally on inframedian and ventral plates series until fading into ventral coloration. Ventral surface of upper lip brown. Dorsalfin membranes hyaline or with slight spotting; dorsalfin spine and rays with oval spots. Adipose fin with weak spots or mottled. Caudal fin distinctly lighter ventrally; spots on ventral lobe fairly large and round and spots on dorsal lobe smaller and oval. Leading edge of pectoralfin spine light; pectoralfin spine with or without spots; small round spots centered on pectoralfin rays; color slightly fading posteriorly on pectoral fin. Pelvic fin with larger spots fading distally, spots on both rays and membrane. Anal fin tan or mottled.
Sexual dimorphism.
One potentially nuptial male examined with hypertrophied odontodes on the sides similar to
Peckoltia
and
Panaque
(
Panaqolus
)
, but shorter and sharper. Hypertrophied odontodes on pectoralfin spine larger in the potentially nuptial male.
Range:
Known from the Río Casiquiare drainage and the upper Río
Orinoco
drainage of Amazonas,
Venezuela
(
Fig. 4
).
Etymology:
From the Latin
sidereus
for starry. Named because the dark background makes the white to gold spots look like stars.