Pseudolithoxus is a genus of suckermouth armored catfishes with five described species from the basins of the Orinoco, Casiquiare and upper Rio Negro in Venezuela.[1] Additionally, a possibly undescribed species is known from the Trombetas and Nhamundá rivers in Brazil.[2]

Pseudolithoxus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Siluriformes
Family: Loricariidae
Tribe: Ancistrini
Genus: Pseudolithoxus
Isbrücker & A. Werner, 2001
Type species
Lasiancistrus tigris
Armbruster & Provenzano, 2000

Taxonomy

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The species group was originally described in 2000 and the four species were temporarily placed in Lasiancistrus.[3] In 2001, the genus Pseudolithoxus was erected for these species.[4] This group forms a monophyletic sister group to Lasiancistrus and Ancistrus.[4] P. anthrax and P. nicoi likely represent sister species.[3] In 2011, P. kelsorum was described based on type material from Venezuela.[1]

Species

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There are currently six recognized species in this genus:[5]

Description

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The largest Pseudolithoxus species reach up to 12.4 cm (4.9 in) in standard length.[5] The genus is characterized by evertible cheek plates, a very dorsoventrally flattened body, extremely hypertrophied odontodes (integumentary teeth) on elongated pectoral spines and along the snout margin, and 3 rows of plates on the caudal peduncle. In addition, it appears as if females as well as males develop hypertrophied snout and pectoral-fin odontodes, traits normally restricted to nuptial males in other loricariids.[3]

Pseudolithoxus species may be differentiated based on colouration. Two species are black, usually with white spots, and lack dark bands on the caudal fin; P. nicoi has a white band at the distal margin of the caudal fin, while P. anthrax does not. P. dumus has a colour pattern consisting of black spots on the head and anterior part of body, while P. tigris has a colour pattern consisting of brown and tan bars on the head and anterior part of body.[3] However, P. dumus and P. tigris may actually both represent more species. In P. dumus, specimens from northern Amazonas have a well-spotted caudal peduncle, those from the Ventuari and Cataniapo Rivers have spots along the mid-line on the caudal peduncle, and those from the Casiquiare have spots combining to form bands on the caudal peduncle. In some P. tigris, though specimens have similar colour patterns, they may differ in thickness of the tan bars and dark bars, body depth, and eye position.[3]

The body of these fish is very dorsoventrally flattened with both ventral- and dorsal-surface flat.[3] The dorsal fin spine is weak, and the dorsal fin spinelet supports odontodes. The pectoral fins are usually elongated, reaching the anus in juveniles and growing to the anal fins in the adults; P. anthrax has been referred to as "flying catfish", probably due to these long pectoral fins in adults. The caudal fin is weakly forked, with the lower lobe longer than the upper. The eyes are mostly dorsal. The abdomen is without plates.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b Lujan, N.K. & Birindelli, J.L.O. (2011). "A new distinctively banded species of Pseudolithoxus (Siluriformes: Loricariidae) from the upper Orinoco River" (p. 38 PDF). Zootaxa. 2941: 38–46. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.2941.1.2.
  2. ^ Collins RA, Ribeiro ED, Machado VN, Hrbek T, Faria IP (2015). "A preliminary inventory of the catfishes of the lower Rio Nhamundá, Brazil (Ostariophysi, Siluriformes)". Biodiversity Data Journal. 3 (3): e4162. doi:10.3897/BDJ.3.e4162. PMC 4426332. PMID 25977611.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Armbruster, Jonathan W.; Provenzano, Francisco (November 2000). "Four New Species of the suckermouth armored catfish genus Lasiancistrus (Loricariidae: Ancistrinae)" (PDF). Ichthyol. Explor. Freshwaters. 11 (3): 241–254.
  4. ^ a b "Pseudolithoxus Isbrücker and Werner (2001)". Archived from the original on 2007-09-05. Retrieved 2007-07-31.
  5. ^ a b Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.). "Species in genus Pseudolithoxus". FishBase. March 2024 version.