Delturus parahybae, EIGENMANN & EIGENMANN, 1889
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2006.00229.x |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5736427 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B47718-FFC2-FFEC-1296-4494D09CE380 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Delturus parahybae |
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DELTURUS PARAHYBAE EIGENMANN & EIGENMANN View in CoL
( FIG. 10 View Figure 10 )
Delturus parahybae Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889: 45 View in CoL [type locality: Parahyba ( Rio Paraíba do Sul, eastern Brazil)].
Specimens examined: Brazil: Lectotype (by present designation): MCZ 7726 About MCZ (207.0 mm SL), male, Rio Paraíba do Sul between Barra do Piraí and Três Rios, Rio de Janeiro, 1865 . Paralectotype: MCZ 163082 About MCZ (1, 210.9 mm SL), collected with the lectotype . Other specimens: FMNH 59734 About FMNH (1, 171.0 mm SL), Barra do Piraí , Rio de Janeiro, 13 July 1908 . MCP 27296 (1, 238.0 mm SL), Rio Pomba, tributary of Rio Paraíba do Sul, c. 15 km downstream of highway Rio-Bahia, Larajal , Minas Gerais, August 1997 . MCP 31467 (1 c&s, 206.8 mm SL), Rio Pombas, tributary of Rio Paraíba do Sul, downstream from future Barra do Braúna hydroelectric dam, Minas Gerais, 31 August 2002 . MNRJ 701 View Materials (1, poor condition), no locality data .
Diagnosis: Delturus parahybae is distinguished from all other Delturus by premaxillary tooth counts (15–24 vs. 26–137), spots on the body and head (vs. a mostly vermiculate pattern), the number of plates between the end of the anal-fin base and the caudal fin [ten to 11 (usually ten) vs. eight to ten (usually nine)], more numerous dorsal-fin rays [nine to ten (usually ten) vs. eight to ten (usually nine)], and a smaller eye [orbital diameter 53.9–64.0% (average 58.4) in interorbital space vs. 61.4–93.0 (average 73.5)]; from D. angulicauda and D. brevis by a deeper head (head depth 53.9–59.7% HL vs. 46.2–54.6% HL); and from D. brevis by having 26–28 lateral plates in the medial series (vs. 22–24).
Description: SL of examined specimens 171.0– 238.0 mm. Other morphometric data are presented in Table 2 View Table 2 .
Body depressed and progressively narrowing from cleithrum to end of caudal peduncle. Dorsal profile of body smoothly convex. Body arches from snout tip to end of supraoccipital process; slightly convex to straight from that posterior tip of supraoccipital to origin of dorsal fin. Dorsal profile descends from origin of dorsal fin to end of caudal peduncle. Trunk mostly round in cross-section, caudal peduncle flattened ventrally and more compressed caudally; trunk somewhat triangular at preadipose region. Greatest body depth at dorsal-fin origin. Dorsal surface of body mostly covered by dermal plates. Three or four median, preadipose plates forming tall ridge between dorsal and adipose fins. Lower surface of head and abdomen naked, except for some platelets sometimes embedded in skin laterally below the pectoral girdle. Median series of lateral plates with 26–28 plates; 11–13 plates bordering dorsal-fin base; ten to 11 plates between end of anal-fin base and caudal fin.
Head broad and depressed. Snout convex anteriorly. Three slightly elevated ridges between orbits and snout tip, lateral ridges more prominent. Dorsal region of head between orbits flat to slightly concave; upper margin of orbits slightly higher than interorbital space. Eyes large (orbit diameter 18.0–19.7% HL), placed dorsolaterally. Iris with small dorsal flap. Lateral margins of head with many thin hypertrophied odontodes in mature males. Lips well developed, occupying most of ventral surface of head. Upper lip with several transversely elongate papillae. Lower lip wide, reaching anterior margin of cleithrum. Lower lip mostly covered with minute papillae, smaller posteriorly. Maxillary barbel short, free. Teeth thick and heavy, bifid, two cusps approximately equal in size ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Premaxilla with 15–24 teeth; dentary with 14–26 teeth. Skin fold anterior to premaxillary teeth and posterior to dentary teeth not very distinct.
Dorsal fin originating slightly anteriorly to vertical line passing through pelvic-fin origin; dorsal-fin spinelet V-shaped and locking mechanism functional; one unbranched and nine to ten (usually ten) branched rays; its margin approximately straight. Fin membrane uniting last dorsal-fin ray to first preadipose plate or terminating just anterior to first preadipose plate. Pectoral fins moderate in size, with one slightly curved and flattened unbranched ray, and six branched ones. First thickened pectoral-fin ray of mature males covered with large hypertrophied odontodes on anterodorsal margin. Posterior pectoralfin margin straight to slightly round, reaching between origin and proximal third of pelvic fins when adpressed. Pelvic fins moderate in size, with one unbranched and five branched rays, reaching from origin to proximal third of anal fin when adpressed. Anal fin with one unbranched and five branched rays. Caudal fin slightly concave; lowermost ray slightly longer than uppermost, 14 branched rays; three to five upper and three to four lower procurrent caudal-fin rays.
Colour in alcohol: Ground colour of dorsal surface of head and body light brown; pale yellow ventrally. Dorsum, head, flanks, and all fins covered with many dark brown, roundish spots about size of pupil. Spots evenly scattered and not arranged in series. Spots less conspicuous on snout. Ventral surface of head and body mostly unpigmented, except for light brown, scattered melanophores on caudal peduncle.
Distribution: Delturus parahybae in known from a few localities in the Rio Paraíba do Sul basin, in the states of Rio de Janeiro and Minas Gerais, Brazil ( Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ).
Ecology: Very little is known on the ecology and habitat of this species, as only six specimens exist in collections. The specimens in MCP 27296 and MCP 31467, from Rio Pomba, were collected during the night in the main river channel, on a rocky bottom and in a very strong current.
Remarks: A lectotype is herein designated for D. parahybae (MCZ 7726). The female specimen also previously in the original lot becomes a paralectotype, now catalogued as MCZ 163082.
Conservation status: Delturus parahybae is a very rare species. Of the six specimens known in scientific collections, two are the lectotype and paralectotype, collected by the Thayer Expedition in 1865. A third specimen was collected in 1908, a fourth in 1997, and a fifth in 2002. A sixth specimen has no locality or date and is in very poor condition. The species is currently threatened by environmental destruction and is regarded as endangered by Pompeu & Vieira (2003).
MCP |
Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio Grande do Sul |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Delturus parahybae
Reis, Roberto E., Pereira, Edson H. L. & Armbruster, Jonathan W. 2006 |
Delturus parahybae
Eigenmann C & Eigenmann RH 1889: 45 |