Rivulus amanapira, Costa, Wilson J. E. M., 2004
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.157829 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5696858 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CD878B-3E66-B578-FED3-2114FBF1CD91 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Rivulus amanapira |
status |
sp. nov. |
Rivulus amanapira View in CoL new species
( Figs. 4–5 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 )
Holotype. UFRJ 5929, male, 38.6 mm SL; Brazil: Estado do Amazonas: São Gabriel da Cachoeira, pools near igarapé Palestina, Airport road, upper rio Negro drainage, rio Amazonas basin (0o9’19.2”S 66o59’58.9”W; altitude 110 m); W. J. E. M. Costa, S. Lima and L. Silva, 30 August 2003.
Paratypes. UFRJ 5930, 2 males, 33.5–39.9 mm SL, 4 females, 29.0– 32.6 mm SL, and 5 juveniles, 13.8–21.8 mm SL; UFRJ 5931, 3 females, 24.8–34.7 mm SL (c&s); MCP 34859, 2 juvenile females, 19.1–21.5 mm SL; all collected with holotype.
Diagnosis: Similar to R. altivelis , R. atratus , R. ornatus , R. rectocaudatus , R. romeri , R. tecminae , and R. uakti , and distinguished from all other congeners by possessing a frontal squamation pattern consisting of one scale with all margins exposed just posterior to snout (vs. scale with all margins exposed near the center of median portion of frontal region) and an oblique infraorbital dark gray bar through chin (vs. never a similar color pattern). Similar to R. tecminae and R. rectocaudatus and distinguished from all other species of the genus by the caudal fin truncate in males (vs. rounded or subtruncate). Distinguished from R. tecminae and R. rectocaudatus by having more scales on the longitudinal series (48–49, vs. 38–43), flank with oblique rows of bright green dots in females (vs. bright green dots absent), caudal fin with dark red line on the dorsal and ventral margins in males (vs. dark marginal line absent). Differs from R. tecminae by having short pelvic fins, their tips reaching the anterior portion of the analfin base in males (vs. reaching the middle of analfin base). Differs from R. rectocaudatus by having flank with narrow red stripes in males (vs. horizontal rows of orange spots) and hyaline caudal fin in females (vs. pale yellow with bright yellow stripe on dorsal and ventral margins).
TABLE 2. Morphometric data of Rivulus amanapira . H: holotype.
Description: Morphometric data given in Table 2. Male larger than female, largest male 39.9 mm SL. Dorsal profile slightly convex from snout to end of dorsalfin base, approximately straight on caudal peduncle. Ventral profile convex on head, almost straight from anterior portion of venter to end of analfin base, nearly straight on caudal peduncle. Body slender, subcylindrical anteriorly, slightly deeper than wide, to compressed posteriorly. Greatest body depth at level of pelvicfin base.
Tip of dorsal and anal fins pointed in male, rounded in female. Caudal fin truncate in male, rounded in female. Pectoral fin rounded, posterior margin on vertical anterior to pelvicfin base. Tip of pelvic fin reaching between base of 1st and 3rd analfin ray in male, and urogenital opening in female. Pelvicfin bases in close proximity. Dorsalfin origin on vertical between base of 11th and 13th analfin ray, and between neural spines of 21st and 23rd vertebra. Analfin origin between pleural ribs of 15th and 17th vertebra. Dorsalfin rays 8; analfin rays 14–15; caudalfin rays 28–30; pectoralfin rays 13; pelvicfin rays 6.
Scales small, cycloid. Body and head entirely scaled, except anterior ventral surface of head. Few scales on caudalfin base; no scales on dorsal and anal fins. Frontal squamation Spatterned; Escales not overlapping medially; scales arranged in transverse pattern, each scale with posterior margin exposed. Longitudinal series of scales 48–49; transverse series of scales 9; scale rows around caudal peduncle 18. Cteniilike contact organ on each scale of ventral portion of male flank. Supraorbital neuromasts 3 + 3. Preopercular canal absent.
Interhyal vestigial, not ossified. Six branchiostegal rays. Second pharyngobranchial teeth absent. Gillrakers of first branchial arch 1 + 8. Three or four vomerine teeth. Dermosphenotic absent. Ventral process of posttemporal absent. Total vertebrae 36–37.
Coloration: Male: Side of body pale purple anteriorly to pale green posteriorly, with eight narrow red stripes. Dorsum light yellowish brown, venter light. Opercular region greenish golden with red spots. Infraorbital region and ventral surface of head light gray; transverse gray bar on chin. Iris light green. Dorsal fin bluish hyaline with gray dots, distal portion pale greenish yellow, sometimes with narrow red line on margin. Anal fin light blue with gray dots, distal portion pale greenish yellow, sometimes with narrow red line on margin. Caudal fin light blue with gray dots, marginal region greenish yellow; narrow red line on dorsal and ventral margins; oval gray spot on subdorsal portion of caudalfin base. Pelvic fin pale yellow. Pectoral fin hyaline.
Female: Side of body light brownish with light pink stripe on lateral midline and oblique rows of light green dots. Dorsum light brown, venter white. Opercular region pale golden. Infraorbital region and ventral surface of head white; transverse gray bar on chin. Iris light yellow. Dorsal fin hyaline. Anal fin light orangish yellow. Caudal fin pinkish hyaline; oval black spot on dorsal portion of caudalfin base. Pectoral fin hyaline. Pelvic fin greenish yellow.
Distribution: Known only from the type locality, floodplains of igarapé Palestina, upper rio Negro drainage, rio Amazonas basin, northern Brazil.
Habitat notes: All specimens of the type series were collected in small shallow temporary pools within the forest, about 0.5–2.0 m of diameter, and about 15 cm deep ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ). The water was turbid and the bottom was litter. No other fish was found in these pools, which were almost contiguous to a lagoon, where no specimen of the new species was found.
Etymology: The name amanapiramiri (amana = rain, pira = fish, miri = small) was recorded by Wallace as the Indian native name for a smaller species similar to R. amanapira , collected by him in the upper rio Negro region, tentatively now identified as R. tecminae . This note was recently published ( Wallace, 2002) in a book consisting of fish drawings and respective notes made during Wallace’s journey to Amazon (1850–1852). According to the notes, the fish is found in small pools in the litter within the forest after rain (exactly the same conditions in which R. amanapira was collected), and consequently the Indians believed that it failed with the rain from the sky. Wallace (2002) mentions another Indian name for the species, owiyeye, which was also mentioned by a Tucano Indian at the moment of the collection of the type series of R. amanapira .
MCP |
Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio Grande do Sul |
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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