• Media type: E-Book; Text
  • Title: New and noteworthy Venezuelan glanapterygine catfishes (Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae), with discussion of their biogeography and psammophily. American Museum novitates ; no. 3496 ; Venezuelan catfishes
  • Contributor: Schaefer, Scott Allen, 1958- [Author]; Provenzano, Francisco. [Author]; Pinna, Mário C. C. [Author]; Baskin, Jonathan N. [Author]
  • imprint: New York, NY : American Museum of Natural History, 2005
  • Extent: 974549 bytes
  • Language: English
  • Keywords: Pygidianops -- Classification ; Typhlobelus -- Classification ; Catfishes -- Venezuela -- Orinoco River Delta -- Classification ; Interstitial animals -- Venezuela -- Orinoco River Delta -- Classification ; Freshwater fishes -- Venezuela -- Orinoco River Delta -- Classification ; Glanapteryginae -- Geographical distribution ; QL1 .A436 no.3496 2005 ; Fishes -- Venezuela -- Orinoco River Delta -- Classification
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  • Description: 27 p. : ill., maps ; 26 cm. ; Includes bibliographical references (p. 25-27). ; Four new species of the trichomycterid subfamily Glanapteryginae are described from the Río Orinoco basin of Venezuela. Two new species each in Pygidianops Myers 1944 and Typhlobelus Myers 1944 represent the first documented occurrence of these genera in Venezuela, and for Pygidianops the first occurrence outside the Río Negro basin. The new species were captured from sand-bottom habitats in two disparate locations in the Orinoco River basin and display a remarkable suite of reductive features, such as loss of eyes, fins, and pigment, and reductions or absence of laterosensory canals and odontodes. Pygidianops cuao, n.sp. from the Río Cuao, a clear-water tributary of the upper Orinoco River, is diagnosed from its congeners by the presence of diminutive eyes and a triangular skin flap at the corner of the mouth. Pygidianops magoi, n.sp., known from near the delta of the Orinoco River, is diagnosed from its congeners by the absence of pectoral and anal fins, presence of four laterosensory pores, and nine or ten caudal-fin rays. Typhlobelus guacamaya, n.sp. from the Río Cuao is diagnosed relative to its congeners by the presence of three branchiostegal rays, posterior naris absent, lack of pleural ribs, and is further distinguished from both T. ternetzi and T. macromycterus by the absence of eyes and from T. lundbergi by the presence of three laterosensory canal pores. Typhlobelus lundbergi, n.sp. from the lower Orinoco is diagnosed by the presence of four laterosensory canal pores and further distinguished from T. ternetzi and T. macromycterus by the absence of eyes. We review the characters useful in diagnoses of Pygidianops and Typhlobelus among trichomycterid catfishes and discuss morphological patterns in the diversification of the Glanapteryginae. Species of Pygidianops and Typhlobelus are known only from the rivers draining the Guyana and Brazilian shields, yet within these areas they occupy all major water types. Such broad ...