The species of the Hypostomus cochliodon group (Siluriformes: Loricariidae).
Author
Jonathan W. Armbruster
text
Zootaxa
2003
249
1
60
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DDFAA9D6-E4FA-4C3C-9749-CF0313D30F3C
journal article
z00249p001
DDFAA9D6-E4FA-4C3C-9749-CF0313D30F3C
[[
Hypostomus cochliodon
Group ]]
Introduction
With 650 species currently considered valid (Eschmeyer 2003), the
Loricariidae
is the most speciose family of catfishes in the world. Loricariids are typically algivorous or detritivorous, but the
Hypostomus cochliodon
group (formerly the genus
Cochliodon Kner
) and
Panaque Eigenmann
are unique among fishes in that they consume wood (Schaefer & Stewart 1993; Nelson et al. 1999). The
H. cochliodon
group and
Panaque
share the derived presence of large, spoon-shaped teeth; however, they are unrelated and are placed in two different tribes, the Hypostomini and the
Ancistrini
, respectively (Armbruster 1997; in press).
The original description of
Cochliodon
was by Heckel (in Kner 1853), but the genus was described in the synonymy of
Hypostomus
Lacepede
. Eigenmann (1922) described
Cheiridodus
and separated the genus from
Cochliodon
based on the presence of a small medial tooth cusp (vs. medial cusp absent). Most loricariids have bicuspid teeth (Muller & Weber 1992), and the presence of a mesial cusp represents a plesiomorphic characteristic within the
Loricariidae
.
Cochliodon
do actually have a small mesial cusp, but this cusp is occasionally fused into the lateral cusp and visible as a darker, thicker ridge on the tooth (pers. obs.).
Isbruecker
(1980) recognized
Cheiridodus
as a synonym of
Cochliodon
, but did so without comment. Armbruster (1997; in press) provided a phylogeny for the species of the
Hypostominae
based on morphology and determined that
Cochliodon
is derived from
Hypostomus
. In addition, Montoya-Burgos et al. (1998) found
Cochliodon
to be related to
Hypostomus
based on sequences of the 12s and 16s rRNA genes, Montoya-Burgos et al. (2002) found
Cochliodon
to be nested within
Hypostomus
based on sequence data from the mitochondrial D-loop, and Zawadzki (pers comm.) has found
Cochliodon
to be derived from
Hypostomus
based on allozymes. Armbruster (1997, in press) recognized
Cochliodon
as a synonym of
Hypostomus
and refers to the species formerly in
Cochliodon
as the
H. cochliodon
group. Weber and Montoya-Burgos (2002) and Montoya-Burgos et al. (2002) also placed
Cochliodon
in the synonymy of
Hypostomus
.
The
Hypostomus cochliodon
group has received little attention from authors except for original species descriptions. The seven currently accepted species of the
H. cochliodon
group are distributed in the Orinoco, Amazon, Essequibo, Magdalena, Paraguay, and Atrato river basins and in the Lake Maracaibo basin (Lilyestrom 1984; Armbruster & Page 1997). There has only been one modern attempt to examine the species of the
H. cochliodon
group. Lilyestrom (1984) provides descriptions of the species of the
H. cochliodon
group in Venezuela, a key to all of the species of the
H. cochliodon
group, and places
Cochliodon pospisili Schultz
into the synonymy of
H. hondae
. The characteristics used in Lilyestrom’s key are mostly proportions and tooth counts and do not adequately separate the species of the
H. cochliodon
group (pers. obs.). Armbruster and Page (1997) redescribe
Rhinelepis levis Pearson
, and place the species in
Cochliodon
.
Hypostomus levis
is unique among the
H. cochliodon
group in the absence of an adipose fin. Weber and Montoya-Burgos(2002) describe
H. fonchii
and suggest that it is related to the
H. cochliodon
group; however, they present no credible evidence for this assertion and
H. fonchii
is not considered to be part of the
H. cochliodon
group in this study.
Placing
Cochliodon
into the synonymy of
Hypostomus
is further supported by two species described herein.
Hypostomus hemicochliodon
and
H. sculpodon
predominantly eat wood, but do not have spoon-shaped teeth. These species have teeth that appear to be intermediate between other
Hypostomus
and other species of the
H. cochliodon
group (Fig. 1) and also appear to eat less wood than the other species of the
H. cochliodon
group (pers. obs. based on gut contents). Although many other
Hypostomus
will occasionally consume small amounts of wood, wood only amounts to a very small fraction of the diet (pers. obs.). In this manuscript all species of the
H. cochliodon
group are redescribed, four new species of the
H. cochliodon
group are described, and distribution maps, a key, and a phylogeny for the species of the
H. cochliodon
group is provided.