Abstract

A new species of Hisonotus is described from the headwaters of the rio Xingu. The new species is distinguished from its congeners by having a functional V-shaped spinelet, odontodes not forming longitudinal aligned rows on the head and trunk, lower counts of the lateral and median series of abdominal figs, presence of a single rostral fig at the tip of the snout, absence of the unpaired figlets at typical adipose fin position, yellowish-tipped teeth, absence of conspicuous dark saddles and stripe on the body and higher number of teeth on the premaxillary and dentary. The new species, Hisonotus acuen, is restricted to headwaters of the rio Xingu basin, and is the first species of the genus Hisonotus described from the rio Xingu basin. Hisonotus acuen is highly variable in aspects of external body proportions, including body depth, snout length, and abdomen length. This variation is partly distributed within and among populations, and is not strongly correlated with body size. PCA of 83 adult specimens from six allopatric populations indicates the presence of continuous variation. Therefore, the available morphological data suggest that the individuals inhabiting the six localities of rio Xingu represent different populations of a single species. Low intraspecific variation in mitochondrial Cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) provides corroborative evidence.

Highlights

  • The subfamily Hypoptopomatinae is a monophyletic group of Loricariids (Schaefer, 2003) composed of 19 genera and 139 species (Eschmeyer and Fong 2014)

  • The genus Hisonotus was resurrected from the synonymy of Otocinclus by Schaefer (1998) based on the reduced or absent snout plates anterior to the nostril, rostrum with enlarged odontodes, and thickened plates forming the lateral rostral margin

  • Morphometrics are given as percentages of standard length (SL), except for subunits of the head region, which are expressed as percentages of head length (HL)

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Summary

Introduction

The subfamily Hypoptopomatinae is a monophyletic group of Loricariids (Schaefer, 2003) composed of 19 genera and 139 species (Eschmeyer and Fong 2014). Within this subfamily, Hisonotus Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889 comprises 33 valid species (Eschmeyer 2014). During a collecting trip in tributaries of the rio Xingu basin, we found fish specimens that have the generally accepted characteristics of Hisonotus listed above but do not match any known species. We describe the rio Xingu specimens as a new species

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