Peckoltia wernekei Armbruster & Lujan

Armbruster, Jonathan W. & Lujan, Nathan K., 2016, A new species of Peckoltia from the Upper Orinoco (Siluriformes, Loricariidae), ZooKeys 569, pp. 105-121 : 106-113

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.569.6630

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D8631FD8-6EF2-48FF-9656-75AE00D0736F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3488FBE3-34F0-4F5B-94D2-60BFA849D945

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:3488FBE3-34F0-4F5B-94D2-60BFA849D945

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Peckoltia wernekei Armbruster & Lujan
status

sp. n.

Taxon classification Animalia Siluriformes Loricariidae

Peckoltia wernekei Armbruster & Lujan sp. n. Figs 3, 4and 5b, Table 1

Peckoltia aff. vittata (Orinoco) Lujan et al., 2015 [molecular phylogeny]

Type locality.

Ventuari River drainage, Amazonas State, Venezuela, South America

Holotype.

AUM 54314, 104.6 mm SL, VENEZUELA, Amazonas State, Ventuari River drainage, Marujeta Creek, 159 km E of San Fernando de Atabapo, 04.2948°, -066.2889°, N.K. Lujan, M. Sabaj Pérez, D.C. Werneke, T. Carvalho, V. Meza-Vargas, 02 April 2010.

Paratypes.

All specimens Venezuela, Amazonas State, Ventuari River drainage: AUM 39248, 1, 63.2 mm SL, Ventuari River at beach at village of Moriche, 116 km NE of Macuruco, 169 km NE of San Fernando de Atabapo, 04.7503°, -066.3549°, D.C. Werneke, N.K. Lujan, M.H. Sabaj, L.S. de Souza, 7 April 2004. AUM 39313, 13, 2 cs, 56.8-87.3 mm SL, Manapiare River, 14.5 km NW of San Juan de Manapi are, 05.4286°, -066.1362°, N.K. Lujan, M.H. Sabaj, L.S. de Souza, D.C. Werneke, 12 April 2004. AUM 39839, 1, 31.5 mm SL, Manapiare River, 10 km NW of San Juan de Manapiare, 05.3868°, -066.1159°, N.K. Lujan, L.S. de Souza, D.C. Werneke, M.H. Sabaj, 14 April 2004. MCNG 56680, 13, 52.6-80.2 mm SL, same data as AUM 39313.

Diagnosis.

Peckoltia wernekei can be separated from all other Peckoltia by having a broken black line of pigment on the upper jaw (vs. solid line of pigment along snout edge or snout uniformly colored or mottled). Peckoltia wernekei can be further separated from Peckoltia vittata by generally having 25 or more teeth in at least one dentary or one premaxilla (vs. generally 24 or fewer; one specimen of Peckoltia wernekei had both upper and lower jaws with <25 teeth/ramus), by having a largely naked abdomen (abdomen with a few plates below pectoral girdle, between pelvic fins and along sides of abdomen; vs. most of ventral surface from the throat to the anus with small plates), and by having large, faint blotches on the abdomen (vs. abdomen uniform). Peckoltia wernekei can be further separated from upper Orinoco congeners as follows: from Peckoltia brevis and Peckoltia lineola by lacking short lines and spots on the head (vs. lines and spots present), from Peckoltia brevis , Peckoltia caenosa and Peckoltia lineola by having a largely naked abdomen (vs. abdomen fully plated), and by generally having 25 or more teeth per jaw ramus (vs. 22 or fewer in Peckoltia brevis , 21 or fewer in Peckoltia caenosa , and 19 or fewer in Peckoltia lineola ); from Peckoltia lujani by having the dentaries meet at an angle less than 90° (vs.>90°), by having large, faint blotches on the abdomen (vs. abdomen with no blotches), by a smaller internares width to interorbital width ratio (21.2-26.6% vs. 28.5-46.5%), and a larger dorsal spine to abdominal length ratio (148.1-178.6% vs. 80.1-134.5%); and from Peckoltia sabaji by having bands in the dorsal and caudal fins (vs. spots) and prominent dorsal saddles on the body (vs. large spots).

Description.

Morphometrics in Table 1. Counts and measurements based on 23 specimens. Small to medium-sized loricariids, largest specimen examined 104.6 mm SL. Body stout, but slightly narrower than Peckoltia vittata . Head gently sloped to supraoccipital. Supraoccipital with tall, rounded crest. Supraoccipital crest raised slightly above nuchal region. Nuchal region rises slightly to nuchal plate. Dorsal slope decreasing in straight line to insertion of dorsal procurrent caudal-fin rays then ascending to caudal fin. Body depth greatest at anteriormost insertion of dorsal fin. Ventral profile flat to caudal fin. Caudal peduncle trapezoidal in cross section with dorsal surface flattened. Body widest at insertion of pectoral fins, narrowest at insertion of caudal fin. Snout rounded.

Eye moderately sized (orbit diameter 18.9 ± 1.0% of head length), dorsal rim of orbit forming tall crest that continues forward to area just anterior of nares as low, rounded ridge. Iris operculum present. Interorbital space with slight, rounded, median hump that is contiguous with ridge of parieto-supraoccipital. Parieto-supraoccipital pointed posteriorly with posterior point raised above nuchal region in small crest. Infraorbitals, frontal, nasal, compound pterotic and parieto-supraoccipital supporting odontodes. Preopercle generally supporting a single column of odontodes that gener ally decrease in number with increasing body size; largest specimen with some odontodes located posterodorsally on preopercle and two individuals without preopercular odontodes. Opercle with one to three rows of odontodes with numbers of rows and numbers of odontodes generally decreasing with increasing body size; largest individual without odontodes.

Lips covered with short, wide papillae. Lower lip wide, reaching just to or slightly short of pectoral girdle; upper lip narrow. Edge of lower lip smooth. Maxillary barbel only barbel present, reaching about two-thirds of distance to gill opening from base of barbel.

Median plates 24-26 (mode 24). Plates unkeeled, but first four or five plates of mid-ventral series bent to form slight ridge. Five caudal peduncle plate rows. Plates on all dorsolateral surfaces of body. Throat naked. Abdomen mostly naked except for a line one to three platelets wide along and slightly posterior to anterior margin of pectoral girdle, few uneven rows of platelets ventral to ventral plate series, patch of platelets below posterior section of pelvic girdle; number of platelets on abdomen increases with body size. Evertible cheek plates supporting hypertrophied odontodes evertible perpendicular to head. Cheek odontodes 17-40 (mode 33). Longest evertible cheek odontode almost reaching vertical through posterior edge of pectoral-fin spine. Hypertrophied cheek odontodes relatively weak. Odontodes slightly longer than average body odontodes present along dorsal-, adipose-, pelvic-, caudal-, and pectoral-fin spines; larger individuals with hypertrophied odontodes at tip of pectoral spine.

Dorsal fin ii,7; dorsal spinelet V-shaped, dorsal-fin locking mechanism present, last ray of dorsal fin not reaching or just reaching preadipose plate when adpressed. Adipose fin with single preadipose plate and moderately long spine. Caudal fin i,14,i; caudal fin forked, ventral lobe longer than dorsal lobe; dorsal and ventral procurrent caudal-fin rays five. Pectoral fin i,6; pectoral-fin spine reaching just posterior to pelvic fin when adpressed ventral to pelvic fin. Pelvic fin i,5; pelvic-fin spine extending one to two plates posterior to anal fin when adpressed. Anal fin i,4; unbranched anal-fin ray slightly shorter than first branched ray.

Teeth bicuspid with lateral lobe one-half to three-quarters length of medial lobe and lateral cusp half width of medial cusp. Eighteen to 32 left dentary teeth (mode 31; 1 of 23 with less than 25); 22-35 left premaxillary teeth (mode 32; 1 of 23 with less than 25); all specimens with at least one jaw ramus having 25 or more teeth.

Color. Base color reddish brown. Head and nape mottled dark brown with distinct, medial dark line along mesethmoid and slightly less distinct lines from lateral portion of naris to lip mark. Parieto-supraoccipital crest darker than surrounding areas. Lip with dark mark consisting of two or three ovoid dashes of brown, lateral portions continue as line to lateral portions of nares (Fig. 6). Dark portion of lips separated from mesethmoid line by distinctly lighter C-shaped region (Fig. 6), which may continue less distinctly between mesethmoid line and lines lateral to nares. Lips may also have other spots. Head colors less distinct in larger specimens. Body with four distinct, oblique bars, first below anterior of dorsal fin, second below posterior end of dorsal fin and anterior part of interdorsal space, third beginning at preadipose plate to about posterior edge of adipose spine, and fourth at end of caudal peduncle; first and second bars fade into a dark wash ventrally connecting the two bars; third and fourth bars continuing around caudal peduncle; bars connected at median plate series. Secondary bars sometimes present between any two primary bars, but generally not as dark, darker ventrally than dorsally; posterior secondary bars darker than anterior; secondary bars may connect across caudal peduncle. Pectoral-fin spine dark brown with alternating, similarly-sized dark and light spots, spots continuing as bands on fin; two to five dark bands on fin with number increasing with body size. Pelvic fin as pectoral but with two to four dark bands. Dorsal fin as pectoral but with dark bands distinctly wider than light bands, three or four dark bands. Anal and caudal fins as pectoral, but with light bands wider than dark bands (one to three dark bands in anal and three to five bands in caudal). Adipose spine with dorsal section of third dark bar covering base in all specimens, with some also having dark spot at tip of spine; in largest individual (holotype) basal and distal spots combine along posterior margin of spine, with ante rior edge having light space between spots. Abdomen mostly light, but with four to six large, faint blotches laterally and occasionally with one or two median faint blotches.

Sexual dimorphism.

None observed.

Distribution.

Known only from the Ventuari River, a right-bank tributary of the upper Orinoco River in Amazonas State, Venezuela (Fig. 7).

Etymology.

Patronym honoring David C. Werneke, Collection Manager of Fishes at the Auburn University Museum, for his diligence, camaraderie and humor during three expeditions to the upper Orinoco Basin and for his long service as a Collection Manager at Auburn University.