Abstract

A new species of Pseudancistrus is described from the Tapajós Basin, and assigned to the P. barbatus group by having hypertrophied odontodes along the snout and lacking evertible cheek plates. The new species is distinguished from other species in that group (P. barbatus, P. corantijniensis, P. depressus and P. nigrescens) by its pattern of spots, length and color of snout odontodes, greater head depth, cleithral width, anal-fin spine length, peduncle depth and internares width. Molecular phylogenetic results corroborate placement of the new species in the Pseudancistrus barbatus group which is otherwise distributed in the Xingu Basin and rivers draining the Guyana Shield into the Atlantic Ocean. Topology tests strongly reject alternative hypotheses supporting close relationships with Guyanancistrus, Lithoxancistrus or the species Pseudancistrus pectegenitor, P. sidereus and P. genisetiger. Additionally, we propose two hypotheses on the distribution of the new species in the rio Tapajós, a Brazilian Shield drainage. The first one proposes that ancestral stock of the P. barbatus group was widely distributed throughout rivers draining the Guyana and Brazilian shields, and the species P. zawadzkii and Pseudancistrus sp. L17 are in the limit of the distribution for the group in Tapajós and Xingu rivers. The second hypothesis proposes that ancestral stock of the P. barbatus group was restricted to Guyana Shield rivers, and that headwater capture events permitted several dispersal routs through Guyana and Amazon rivers, permitted that the ancestral lineages of Pseudancistrus sp. L17 and P. zawadzkii reached the rivers of Amazon basin.

Highlights

  • Ancistrini is a highly diverse tribe of the subfamily Hypostominae, with 30 genera (Lujan and Armbruster 2011; Covain and Fisch-Muller 2012; Salcedo 2013) and 252 valid species (Eschmeyer and Fong 2013) widely distributed in the Neotropics from rivers in Panamá to the La Plata system in Argentina. Armbruster (2004a) provided morphological support for the monophyly of Ancistrini based on his extensive analysis of relationships within Loricariidae

  • We present a formal description of a new species of Pseudancistrus from the Tapajós river basin

  • We provide a phylogenetic context for the new species based on analysis of sequence data of F-reticulon 4 nuclear gene, and a brief discussion of biogeographic scenarios that may explain the distribution of the new species in the rio Tapajós and northern Brazilian Shield

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ancistrini is a highly diverse tribe of the subfamily Hypostominae, with 30 genera (Lujan and Armbruster 2011; Covain and Fisch-Muller 2012; Salcedo 2013) and 252 valid species (Eschmeyer and Fong 2013) widely distributed in the Neotropics from rivers in Panamá to the La Plata system in Argentina. Armbruster (2004a) provided morphological support for the monophyly of Ancistrini based on his extensive analysis of relationships within Loricariidae. Molecular data suggested that Ancistrini is not monophyletic (Montoya-Burgos 1998; Covain and Fish-Muller 2012). Covain and Fisch-Muller (2012) recognized Pseudancistrus as paraphyletic, and restricted the genus by the P. barbatus group. Covain and Fisch-Muller (2012) suggested that Pseudancistrus guentheri (Regan, 1904) and P. kwinti Willink, Mol & Chernoff, 2010 may be added to the P. barbatus group. They revalidated the genera Guyanancistrus and Lithoxancistrus, and considered P. pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster & Sabaj Pérez, 2007, P. sidereus Armbruster, 2004b, and P. genisetiger Fowler, 1941 to represent two separate lineages unrelated to Pseudancistrus. They revalidated the genera Guyanancistrus and Lithoxancistrus, and considered P. pectegenitor Lujan, Armbruster & Sabaj Pérez, 2007, P. sidereus Armbruster, 2004b, and P. genisetiger Fowler, 1941 to represent two separate lineages unrelated to Pseudancistrus. Covain and Fisch-Muller (2012) suggested that these two lineages represent undescribed genera

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call