JOURNAL ARTICLE

Trichomycterus igobi, a new catfish species from the rio Iguaçu drainage: the largest head in Trichomycteridae (Siluriformes: Trichomycteridae)

Wolmar Benjamin WosiackiMário C. C. de Pinna

Year: 2008 Journal:   Neotropical Ichthyology Vol: 6 (1)Pages: 17-23   Publisher: Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia

Abstract

A new species of Trichomycterus is described for the rio Iguaçu drainage in Southern Brazil. Trichomycterus igobi, new species, is readily distinguishable from all other species currently in the genus by its extremely large head (23.8-26.8 % SL), which is proportionally the largest head in any Trichomycteridae. That characteristic plus the relatively deep body result in a very short-bodied overall aspect, the most extremely such case in the genus Trichomycterus. Other diagnostic features that distinguish the new species from most or all of its congeners include a short caudal peduncle (15.4-19.7 % SL); an almost entirely cartilaginous second hypobranchial (with only vestigial ossification); a mesial expanded palatine ossification; a narrow cleithrum, falciform in shape; and the lack of a proximal posterior concavity on the third ceratobranchial. The new species seems to form a monophyletic group with T. stawiarski and other undescribed species (T. sp. C), also endemic to the rio Iguaçu. As putative synapomorphies, the three species share a rigid spine-like morphology of individual procurrent caudal-fin rays, an extended area of dorsal caudal-fin procurrent rays, and numerous branchiostegal rays (ten or eleven).

Keywords:
Biology Monophyly Catfish Anatomy Genus Synapomorphy Fish fin Zoology Peduncle (anatomy) Ossification Phylogenetic tree Fish <Actinopterygii> Fishery Genetics

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Citation History

Topics

Fish biology, ecology, and behavior
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Nature and Landscape Conservation
Fish Biology and Ecology Studies
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Aquatic Science
Fish Ecology and Management Studies
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Nature and Landscape Conservation
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