Sorubim cuspicaudus Littmann, Burr and Nass 2000

Michael W. Littmann, 2007, Systematic review of the neotropical shovelnose catfish genus Sorubim Cuvier (Siluriformes: Pimelodidae)., Zootaxa 1422, pp. 1-29 : 17

publication ID

z01422p001

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1CCCAEFE-5AEB-4489-94D3-0E5BCBB65DB1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6240464

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DC2B4E3F-13A4-2034-38EA-3553ADBA4E34

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Sorubim cuspicaudus Littmann, Burr and Nass 2000
status

 

Sorubim cuspicaudus Littmann, Burr and Nass 2000 View in CoL   ZBK

Trans-Andean Shovelnose Catfish (English); Antioqueno, Bagre blanco, Blanco pobre, Blanquillo, Cucharo, Gallego, hocico de paleton (Spanish)

Fig. 8 (Holotype)

Holotype: FMNH 56223 (327 mm SL). Colombia, Depto. de Tolima, Río Magdalena drainage, at Puerto Soplaviento, 11 Jan 1912, C. H. Eigenmann.

Diagnosis: Distinguished from all congeners by the following characters: caudal fin deeply forked; outer, unbranched principal rays of upper and lower lobes longest in each lobe and about equal in length (Littmann et al. 2000, fig. 2); posterior fontanelle elongate, forming conspicuous groove on supraoccipital bone, skin pigmented black in groove; other congeners without elongate posterior fontanelle, supraoccipital groove, or black pigment; unique in having combination of elongate body and broad-shaped head; other Sorubim   ZBK species have either elongate body and head, or stout body with broad head.

Etymology: the specific epithet cuspi- (from cuspis), Latin for pointed, and -caudus, Latin for tail, refers to the diagnostic pointed caudal-fin lobes. The first part of the English common name “Trans-Andean” describes the general distribution of the fish; the remainder of the name (shovelnose catfish) is familiar to enthusiasts of the aquarium hobby, and differs from that recommended for S. lima (i.e., Duckbill catfish) by Robins et al. (1991).

Distribution: Sorubim cuspicaudus   ZBK occurs west of the Andean Cordillera Oriental, and is endemic to three major drainage basins in northwestern South America: Lago Maracaibo, Ríos Magdalena and Sinu (Fig. 10). Miles (1947) reported that Sorubim   ZBK (referred to as S. lima ) was not found in the upper reaches of the Río Cauca in northern Colombia. The cis/trans-Andean distribution pattern exhibited by Sorubim   ZBK is repeated by some other lowland fish groups that have been critically examined in recent years (see references in Vari (1988) and Harold & Vari (1994).

Remarks: Sorubim infraoculare Spix and Agassiz 1829   ZBK was listed as a junior subjective synonym of S. lima above. Eigenmann and Eigenmann (1890) also listed S. infraoculare   ZBK as such in their revision of the South American Nematognathi. Although justification for their conclusion was not included, this well-known revision included one of the first records of Sorubim   ZBK reported from the Río Magdalena drainage, Colombia.

FMNH

USA, Illinois, Chicago, Field Museum of Natural History (also used by Finnish Museum of Natural History)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Siluriformes

Family

Pimelodidae

Genus

Sorubim

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