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Crenicichla dandara, ne species: the black jacunda from the Rio Xingu (Teleostei: Cichlidae)

出版社

ACAD NATURAL SCIENCES PHILA
DOI: 10.1635/053.166.0104

关键词

Amazon basin; endemism; rapids; rheophilic species; taxonomy; camouflage; feeding strategy

资金

  1. iXingu Project [NSF DEB-1257813]
  2. Laboratorio de Ictiologia de Altamira [FAPESP 2011/502827]
  3. CNPq [486376/2013-3]
  4. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico - CNPQ [150304/2017-0]
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology [1257813] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Crenicichla dandara, new species, is endemic to the rio Xingu above the Belo Monte narrows, and its major left bank tributary the rio Inn. The new species is distinguished from all congeners by the following combination of characters: body uniformly black (live fishes) or dark brown (preserved specimens) in adults and 74-86 scales in the E1 row. Crenicichla dandara is considered herein to be the tenth species of the C. lugubris group, but its allies within the group are not clear. Among members of this group, C. dandara is most similar in general body shape, snout characteristics and squamation to C. lugubris and C. adspersa, but lacks a caudal-tin blotch as does C.johanna and C. monicae, a condition rare within the Crenicichla-Tekocichkr Glade. The overall black coloration in Crenicichla dandara is shared with the syntopic, but not closely. related, Tekocichla prela. Both species inhabit clear water rapids where they hide among the shadows of large rocks, suggesting that the dark coloration is for camouflage and ambush predation. Based on a preliminary assessment of its conservation status following the criteria and categories of IUCN classification, Crenicichla dandara is considered as a species of least concern (LC).

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