Cordylancistrus nephelion, Provenzano, Francisco & Milani, Nadia, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.171647 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5696570 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C8879C-FFB7-FFB1-FEC7-FEB8B37AF984 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cordylancistrus nephelion |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cordylancistrus nephelion View in CoL new species
Figs. 1–2 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 , Table 1 View TABLE 1
Holotype: MBUCVV 21800, 129.1 mm SL; Venezuela, Caribbean Sea basin, Tuy River system, Mesia River, tributary of the Guare River, near Village Corocito, approximately 10°12'N, 67°05'W; N. Padilla and H. Camejo; 26 January 1992.
Paratypes: All from Venezuela, Caribbean Sea basin, Tuy River system. Miranda State: MBUCVV21801, 1 ex., 121.2 mm SL; collected with the holotype. MBUCVV 12526, 1 ex., 61.0 mm SL; Grande River approximately 500 m upstream from its mouth in Santa Cruz River, a tributary of Taguaza River, Guatopo National Park, approx. 10°05'N, 66°29'W; R. Royero and party; 0 1 March 1981. MBUCVV16382, 1 ex., 55.2 mm SL; Mesia River, tributary of the Guare River, Paso del Viento, near the road to Tácata, approx. 10°12'N, 67°02'W; N. Padilla and L. Aguana; 30 January 1992. MBUCVV21806, 1 ex., 31.1 mm SL; Cagua River, Boca de Cagua, approximately 10 km E of Village Guayas, approx. 10°14'N 67°07'W; R. Royero, F. Gil and C. Navarrese, 0 6 April 1991. MBUCVV 27872, 1 ex, 76.4 mm SL; Mesia River, tributary of the Guare River, Pozo El Cirilo, near Village El Salado, approx. 10°13'N 67°03'W; N. Padilla and E. Camejo; 29 May 1994. Aragua State: MBUCVV22700, 1 ex., 75.9 mm SL; Quebrada Agua Amarilla, a tributary of the Cagua River, Village Agua Amarilla, SE of Tejerias, approx. 10°12'N, 67°03'W; N. Padilla; 23 February 1992.
Diagnosis. Cordylancistrus nephelion can be distinguished from the other species assigned to its genus by its unique color pattern. Head and body blackish to greenish brown with white irregular spots. Abdomen uniformly white. All fins with whitish spots that simulate bands.
Description. Morphometric data are given in Table 1 View TABLE 1 . Head wide and slightly depressed. Snout edge covered with small plates, its contour oval. Eyes in dorsal position, dorsal edge of the orbits slightly raised, small odontodes found around orbits. Interorbital space flat. Posterior edge of the supraoccipital without a fleshy keel. Mouth wide, lips papillose, papillae of the anterior lip slightly larger. Edge of the posterior lip with marked undulations. Maxillary barbels very short and joined to lower lip by a fleshy flap, leaving tip of barbel free. Premaxilla and dentary enlarged. Inside mouth behind premaxilla with three to five larger papillae. Also behind the dentary three to five larger and smooth papillae present that increase in size toward center of mouth ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Teeth numerous, 49 to 105 teeth on each premaxilla and 53 to 129 on each dentary. Teeth are very thin and elongated, with apex curved toward interior of mouth. Teeth bifurcate, one lobe slightly longer than other, both tips are pointed. Tooth apex yellowish, stalk whitish. Interopercular hypertrophied evertible odontodes vary in size; longest odontode sometimes reaches the cleithrum but surpasses it in only one specimen. Hypertrophied odontodes vary in number from six on smallest specimen to 25 on the largest. Body robust and relatively deep. Caudal peduncle compressed. Lateral plates of the body without spiny keels. Lateral line plates 23 to 24. Postanal plates 10 to 11. Interdorsal plates six, the last with a slight keel. Ventral surface of body naked to origin of anal fin. Dorsal fin I8. Pectoral fin I6, pectoral spine relatively short, reaching onethird length of pelvic spine or less. In all examined specimens, pectoral spine with odontodes on posterodorsal surface. Anal fin with four branched rays, three on one specimen. Pelvic fin I5. Caudal fin I14 I, obliquely truncate.
Color. In specimens preserved in 70% ethanol head and body color varies from blackish to greenish brown with white irregular spots; abdomen uniformly white. Dorsal surface of head with small spots that become larger posteriorly. Spots along body approximately as wide as the eye; in some cases two or more spots unite to form a spot of greater size. Spine and branched rays of dorsal fin with four to five whitish spots. Interradial membrane with irregular translucent spots, more evident towards the distal margin. In largest specimens (121 and 129 mm SL), pectoralfin and pelvicfin spine have six to seven whitish spots and branched rays have five to six, while in smaller specimens (76.4 mm SL or less) spines with four to five and branched rays with three to four. Interradial membrane hyaline. Anal fin generally whitish with dark distal border. Adipose fin with whitish band. Caudalfin spines with six to seven whitish spots and branched rays with four to six. Interradial membrane with pattern similar to dorsal fin.
Range. The specimens of Cordylancistrus nephelion were captured in three tributaries of the Tuy River: the Cagua River, the Mesia River (a tributary of the Guare River) and the Santa Cruz River (a tributary of the Taguaza River) at 40 km, 55 km and 130 km east of the headwaters of the Tuy River respectively ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). This distribution suggests that the species may be present throughout the Tuy River basin. The species seems to inhabit small rivers of the north slope of the Serranía del Interior, Cordillera de La Costa. These rivers have transparent waters, with moderate to strong flow and a temperature of 15° to 20° C. The bottom generally consists of stone, gravel and sand. The predominant vegetation in this mountainous area is cloud forest.
An exhaustive review of the Venezuelan fish collections shows that the geographic distribution of the three species of Cordylancistrus present in the country is restricted and disjunct. Cordylancistrus torbesensis inhabits the foothill rivers of the south slope of the Cordillera de Mérida; C. perijae is found in rivers of the eastern slope, north of the Sierra of Perijá and C. nephelion inhabits the Tuy River basin, in rivers of the north slope of the Serranía of the Interior, Cordillera de La Costa ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ).
Etymology. The name of the species is taken from the Greek word nephelion , meaning cloudlike spots, in reference to the color pattern of the species.
Holotype | MIN | MAX | AVE | STD | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SL (mm) | 129,10 | 31,10 | 129,10 | 78,56 | 35,33 |
1 Head length | 35,24 | 34,32 | 41,16 | 36,32 | 2,41 |
2 Predorsal length | 43,14 | 42,90 | 46,62 | 44,17 | 1,37 |
3 Postdorsal length | 36,64 | 35,05 | 37,68 | 35,98 | 0,95 |
4 Interdorsal length | 14,79 | 10,13 | 15,31 | 13,29 | 1,93 |
5 Preanal length | 64,14 | 64,14 | 69,45 | 67,36 | 1,84 |
6 Postanal length | 28,43 | 28,43 | 35,11 | 30,50 | 2,20 |
7 Thoracic length | 20,99 | 20,58 | 23,44 | 21,93 | 1,00 |
8 Abdominal length | 22,46 | 19,61 | 24,01 | 21,69 | 1,40 |
9 Dorsal fin base | 22,08 | 18,49 | 22,53 | 20,91 | 1,49 |
10 Dorsal spine length | 24,98 | 21,34 | 25,50 | 23,50 | 1,67 |
11 Pectoral spine length | 32,61 | 24,77 | 33,00 | 27,77 | 3,65 |
12 Pelvic spine length | 25,64 | 25,00 | 27,31 | 25,94 | 0,86 |
13 Cleithral width | 36,17 | 32,80 | 36,17 | 34,61 | 1,14 |
14 Caudal peduncle depth | 14,64 | 12,50 | 14,64 | 13,43 | 0,84 |
15 Head depth | 19,33 | 17,21 | 20,16 | 18,81 | 1,02 |
16 Snout length | 69,67 | 59,38 | 70,55 | 66,67 | 4,29 |
17 Interorbital width | 29,23 | 27,34 | 30,29 | 28,45 | 1,03 |
18 Orbital diameter | 13,63 | 13,63 | 16,52 | 15,37 | 0,94 |
19 Longest interopercular odontode | 40,88 | 11,72 | 40,88 | 21,23 | 9,81 |
20 Mandibular ramus length | 29,89 | 23,44 | 30,77 | 28,36 | 2,51 |
21 IOW/MRL | 0,98 | 1.17 | 0.93 | 1.0 1 | 0.0 8 |
22 HL/IOW | 3,42 | 3.66 | 3.30 | 3.52 | 0.13 |
23 IOW/OD | 2,15 | 2.15 | 1.73 | 1.86 | 0.17 |
24 HL/OD | 7,34 | 7.34 | 6.0 5 | 6.53 | 0.42 |
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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