Pseudancistrus sidereus, a new species from southern Venezuela (Siluriformes: Loricariidae) with a redescription of Pseudancistrus.
Author
Jonathan W. Armbruster
text
Zootaxa
2004
628
1
15
http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C8D199F9-0677-41B1-ACD1-8A685EE26AE2
journal article
z00628p001
C8D199F9-0677-41B1-ACD1-8A685EE26AE2
[[
Pseudancistrus Bleeker
]]
Introduction
Pseudancistrus
is a medium-sized genus (14 species) of the Loricariidae and is a member of the tribe Ancistrini of the Hypostominae (Armbruster 2004). Bleeker (1862) described
Pseudancistrus
and separated it from all other members of his Plecostomiformes (=Hypostominae) except
Plecostomus
(=
Hypostomus
) based on the inability to evert the cheek plates but with the presence of hypertrophied cheek odontodes.
Isbruecker
(1980) retained
Pseudancistrus
as close to
Hypostomus
and placed the two genera in a more restrictive Hypostominae, but Schaefer (1986; 1987) found that
Pseudancistrus
shared a modified bar- or sickle-shaped opercle with the Ancistrinae (now Ancistrini).
Pseudancistrus
is also known for the presence of sometimes extremely hypertrophied odontodes along the snout (Burgess 1989). Male and female
Pseudancistrus barbatus
were pictured in Darwin (1882), and Darwin stated that the male had very hypertrophied odontodes on the snout and they were barely present in females; however, females do develop hypertrophied odontodes in
Pseudancistrus
species with hypertrophied snout odontodes (Armbruster and Provenzano 2000), although they may not be as long as in males (pers. obs.). Several species appear to lack hypertrophied snout odontodes (
P. brevispinis
,
P. megacephalus
, and the species described herein as
P. sidereus
; pers. obs.), and hypertrophied snout odontodes are also found in numerous members of the Ancistrini (
Dolichancistrus
and
Lasiancistrus
for example) as well as many other members of the Loricariidae. However, the presence of hypertrophied snout odontodes is useful in identifying many
Pseudancistrus
because they are present in the species that have them regardless of season or sex, and they develop fairly early in ontogeny (pers. obs.).
Isbruecker
et al. (1988) described
Lithoxancistrus orinoco
as a
new genus and species
based on the derived presence of large papillae located behind each dentary.
Isbruecker
et al. (2001) described
Guyanancistrus
for several species that were formerly placed in
Lasiancistrus
(
Isbruecker
1980; Heitmans et al. 1983). The diagnosis of
Guyanancistrus
in
Isbruecker
et al. (2001) was brief, and only stated that the species lack the characteristic odontodes of
Lasiancistrus
(apparently referring to the whiskerlike odontodes of Armbruster 2004); and no characteristics were given to unite the species of
Guyanancistrus
. The species of
Guyanancistrus
further lack other synapomorphies for
Lasiancistrus
, and are not closely related to
Lasiancistrus
(Armbruster 2004). Armbruster (2004) found that the species of
Pseudancistrus
,
Lithoxancistrus
,
Guyanancistrus
,
Hemiancistrus megacephalus
, and the species described herein as
P. sidereus
form a well-diagnosed (decay index = 5), monophyletic clade. Armbruster (2004) placed
Lithoxancistrus
and
Guyanancistrus
into the synonymy of
Pseudancistrus
and transfered
Hemiancistrus megacephalus
to
Pseudancistrus
.
Pseudancistrus sidereus
,
new species
, can be considered a basal member of
Pseudancistrus
based on its lack of the features of more derived members of the genus such as hypertrophied odontodes along the snout (Fig. 1) and loss of the evertible cheek plates, and its placement was in a basal polytomy with
P. brevispinis
,
P. megacephalus
, and the remainder of
Pseudancistrus
in Armbruster (2004).
Pseudancistrus sidereus
has a unique ridge on the caudal peduncle formed from the concave dorsal sections of the ventral row plates and a fairly uncommon color pattern of white to gold spots.
Pseudancistrus sidereus
is found only in the southern Venezuelan state of Amazonas, and is described herein.
Pseudancistrus
is also diagnosed and redescribed.