Journal
ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 159, Issue 1, Pages 223-371Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00588.x
Keywords
adaptive radiation; Apteronotidae; cladistics; convergence; key innovation; new species; osteology; South America
Categories
Funding
- National Museum of Natural History
- National Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution
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Analysis of 88 characters of external and internal body systems yielded a phylogenetic reconstruction of the Neotropical electric knifefish genus Sternarchorhynchus (Apteronotidae; Gymnotiformes). The results support a hypothesis of Sternarchorhynchus as the sister group to Platyurosternarchus. A series of synapomorphies, many involving major innovations of the neurocranium, jaws, suspensorium, and associated systems that permit an unusual mode of graspsuction feeding, support the monophyly of both genera. Synapomorphies largely resolve relationships within Sternarchorhynchus with basal nodes strongly supported by characters pertinent to prey capture and initial processing of food items These possible key innovations may provide Sternarchorhynchus with a competitive advantage over other clades of the Apteronotidae and account for the species diversity of the genus in Neotropical rivers. Adaptive radiation in Sternarchorhynchus was analysed. Habitat preference transitions repeatedly occurred in the genus between deepriver channel dwelling species and rheophilic species with preferences for higher energy setting including rapids and swift flowing fluviatile settings. Twenty-two species of Sternarchorhynchus are described as new based on samples that originated in the smaller rivers draining into the Golfo de Paria, the Marowijne and Essequiho River basins, the Rio Orinoco and in particular the Amazon River basin. The 32 species in Sternarchorhynchus make it the most speciose genus in the Apteronotidae. No claim to original US government works. Journal compilation (C) 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 159, 223-371.
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