Pseudancistrus pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster & Sabaj Pérez, 2007

Armbruster, Jonathan W. & Lujan, Nathan K., 2024, New tribe-level classification of Hypostominae (Loricariidae) based on optimization of morphological states on DNA-based relationships, with descriptions of three new tribes and two new genera, Neotropical Ichthyology (e 240108) 22 (4) : -

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-2024-0108

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:77F9CE7F-F821-4D64-9DDB-A9CB358F0119

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14682560

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CD2E87D2-FFA1-FFDF-FDBB-FA600780CDB2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pseudancistrus pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster & Sabaj Pérez, 2007
status

 

Type-species. Pseudancistrus pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster & Sabaj Pérez, 2007 View in CoL

Included species.

Pseudancistrus pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster, Sabaj Pérez, 2007:164 View in CoL , figs. 1b, 2-3. Río Casiquiare, 73 kilometers northeast of San Carlos de Río Negro, 02.3525°, -066.5753°, Amazonas, Venezuela.

Phylogenetic diagnosis. Spindle-shaped hypohyal (21: 0>1), upper pharyngeal jaw with invagination in shelf (29: 0>1), reversal to horizontally oriented preopercle (61: 1>0), wide, blunt articulating condyle of quadrate (67: 0>1), tall ridge on lateral ethmoid for contact with metapterygoid (97:2), reduction to three to eight vertebrae from first normal neural spine posterior to dorsal fin to spine under preadipose plate (120: 1>0; this is concomitant with a unique shortening of the body posterior to the dorsal fin), flared distal margin of rib of sixth vertebral centrum (128: 0>1), ten dorsal-fin rays (142: 0>1), reduction to five or six dorsal-fin radial elements with transverse processes (145: 1>0), reversal to wide posterior process of coracoid (158: 2>1), presence of dentary papillae (180: 0>1), presence of tentacules on hypertrophied snout and pectoral-fin spine odontodes, tentacules shorter than associated odontodes (208: 0>1, 209: 0>1). Further, Colossimystax has a larger supraoccipital crest than Stellantia or other species currently or formerly in Pseudancistrus , with crest most similar to Hemiancistrus medians but still taller and with a greater ventromedial lamina ( Fig. 6).

Comparative diagnosis. Colossimystax is readily distinguished from all other Hypostominae except Acanthicini , Chaetostomatini , and Pterygoplichthys by having 10 dorsal-fin rays (vs. 7); from all other Hypostominae except Stellantia by having the dorsal lamina of each ventral plate of the caudal peduncle concave, accentuating the ventrolateral keel of the caudal peduncle (vs. ventral plates on caudal peduncle lacking strongly concave dorsal lamina or plates rounded and keel absent); from other species with more than seven dorsal-fin rays except Dolichancistrus by nuptial males having hypertrophied cheek odontodes reaching to at least the edge of the third plate of the midventral series (vs. maximally reaching the first plate); from Dolichancistrus by nuptial males having many hypertrophied cheek odontodes (vs. 1 or 2); from Hypostominae except Chaetostoma and Lithoxancistrus by having a single or small cluster of enlarged papillae located medially on dentaries interior to tooth rows (vs. all papillae small).

Description. See Tab. S3 and Lujan et al. (2007).

Geographical distribution. Found in main channels and major tributaries of the Orinoco River upstream of San Fernando de Atabapo and in the Casiquiare River above its confluence with the Negro River, including the lower Ventuari River. Currently known exclusively from Venezuela but may also occur in neighboring basins of Colombia and Brazil ( Fig. 5).

Etymology. Colossimystax is from the Latin colossicon for gigantic and mystax for moustache in reference to the very long cheek odontodes that look like a moustache, a masculine noun.

Conservation status. Colossimystax pectegenitor was evaluated as Least Concern (LC) by the IUCN (Echevarría, 2019). Only three disjunct localities are known, but all are main channel habitats, suggesting a likely contiguous distribution throughout a remote area of southern Venezuela in which the most threatening impact is gold mining.

Material examined. Amazonas, Venezuela. Holotype: MCNG 54797 View Materials [ex AUM 42130 View Materials ], 241.6 mm SL, Río Casiquiare . Paratypes: ANSP 182801 About ANSP [ex AUM 42181 View Materials ], 1, 225.1 mm SL, Río Orinoco ; AUM 42202 View Materials , 1 View Materials , 227.0 mm SL, Río Casiquiare ; AUM 43192 View Materials , 1 View Materials c&s, 173.6 mm SL, Río Orinoco .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Siluriformes

Family

Loricariidae

Genus

Pseudancistrus

Loc

Pseudancistrus pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster & Sabaj Pérez, 2007

Armbruster, Jonathan W. & Lujan, Nathan K. 2024
2024
Loc

Pseudancistrus pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster, Sabaj Pérez, 2007:164

Lujan, Armbruster, Sabaj Perez 2007: 164
2007
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