The genera Isorineloricaria and Aphanotorulus (Siluriformes: Loricariidae) with description of a new species
Author
Ray, C. Keith
Author
Armbruster, Jonathan W.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4072
5
501
539
journal article
46839
10.11646/zootaxa.4072.5.1
235dd6cd-8f4e-4d97-abe9-49048dee198a
1175-5326
263020
9C5743A5-6F97-471E-8F60-99A744193FE1
Aphanotorulus
Isbrücker and Nijssen 1983
Aphanotorulus
Isbrücker & Nijssen, 1983
: 105
.
Type
species:
Aphanotorulus frankei
Isbrücker & Nijssen, 1983
.
Type
by original designation.
Squaliforma
Isbrücker & Michels
, in Isbrücker
et al.
, 2001: 22.
Type
species:
Hypostomus horridus
Kner, 1854
.
Type
by original designation.
Diagnosis.
Aphanotorulus
can be separated from
Hypostomus
by having hypertrophied odontodes on the heads and lateral plates of nuptial males (vs. hypertrophied odontodes absent) and from all sympatric
Hypostomus
by having a light tan background (vs. dark tan to brown), from
Isorineloricaria
by having caudal peduncles that do not become greatly lengthed with size and that are oval in cross section (vs. caudal peduncle proportions that get proportionately longer with size and that become round in cross-section), and by having small dark spots (less than half plate diameter) on a light tan background (vs. spots almost as large as lateral plates on a nearly white background.
Aphanotorulus
can be further separated from the taxa recognized in Armbruster’s Corymbophanini by having an adipose fin (vs. adipose fin replaced by postdorsal ridge of 13–17 azygous plates); from the Corymbophanini and
Rhinelepinae
by having the iris operculum (vs iris operculum absent); from the
Rhinelepinae
by lacking exposure of the coracoid strut (vs. coracoid strut exposed, supporting odontodes), and by having the anal fin I,4 (vs. I,6); from the
Pterygoplichthyini
by having the stomach attached via the dorsal mesentery only (vs. connected to the lateral abdominal walls by a connective tissue sheet) and by usually having one plate between the supra-preopercle and opercle, rarely two (vs. two to three); from the
Ancistrini
(except
Spectracanthicus murinus
and some
Pseudancistrus
) and the
Pterygoplichthyini
by having the cheek plates evertible to about 30° to the head and generally lacking hypertrophied odontodes on the cheek plates with the only exception nuptial males in a few species (vs. cheek plates evertible to 70° or more and hypertrophied odontodes usually present); from
Spectracanthicus
by having the dorsal and adipose fins separate (vs. connected by a posterior extension of the dorsal fin), and from
Pseudancistrus
without evertible cheek plates by having three plates between the head and dorsal fin (including the nuchal plate, vs. four or more).