Abstract
Gymnogeophagus jaryi, new species, is described from Southern tributaries of the Middle Paraná basin in Misiones. It can be distinguished from all other members of the genus, except from G. australis and G. caaguazuensis, by the presence of a hyaline to grey anterior portion of the dorsal fin. Gymnogeophagus jaryi differs from G. caaguazuensis by a longer caudal peduncle, caudal fin not lyrate, central portion of scales on dorsal portion of trunk light iridescent blue and by white spots in soft portion of dorsal fin in adult males, and from G. australis by the light iridescent blue coloration of central portion of scales on the dorsal portion of trunk and tail, and by the lack of scales on the soft portion of the dorsal fin. Additionally, it can be diagnosed by the following unique combination of characters: 10–11 dorsal-fin branched rays, 27–30 E1 scales, absence of lips thickening, and, in males, by the possession of a hump in adults, caudal fin not lyrate, presence of large white spots forming transversal stripes distally and in anterior area of the dorsal fin’s soft portion, central area of scales on the dorsal portion of the trunk light iridescent blue, lack of scales on the base of the dorsal fin’s soft portion, absence of a conspicuous and oblique dark band from the eye to the anterior border of the head, anterior portion of dorsal fin hyaline to grey, scales of the midlateral spot each bearing a semicircular light blue blotch, head hump starting at the horizontal through the eyes, concave anterior profile in lateral view, base of unpaired fins yellow, and whitish hyaline spots on caudal fin. The new species, based on mtDNA phylogeny, is the sister species of G. caaguazuensis from the Paraguay basin and is closely related to G. australis.
Highlights
Cichlidae is one of the most diverse families of fishes of the world, with almost 600 valid species in the Neotropical region which are included into Cichlinae [1]
Gymnogeophagus jaryi possesses the diagnostic characters of the genus Gymnogeophagus
According to our phylogenetic analyses, G. jaryi is closely related to G. caaguazuensis and G. australis, species that share the light grey unspotted anterior portion of dorsal fin, in some specimens it is slightly more yellowish grey in G. australis and slightly reddish grey in G. jaryi
Summary
Cichlidae is one of the most diverse families of fishes of the world, with almost 600 valid species in the Neotropical region which are included into Cichlinae [1]. Within this subfamily, Gymnogeophagus Miranda Ribeiro 1918 includes 18 extant species [2, 3] and one fossil [4], distributed in the La Plata basin, the Laguna dos Patos system, and the rıo Tramandaı basin, plus a single record of G. balzanii from the rıo Guaporein the Amazon basin [2,5]. After the revision of specimens from this area in Misiones, we describe a new species of the G. gymnogenys species group, representing the first new species from this species group in this area
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