Bruno F. Melo1 and Tiago C. Faria2
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Abstract
A new species of Cyphocharax is described from the rio Juma, which flows across the meridional Amazon basin and is a tributary of the rio Aripuanã in the rio Madeira fluvial system. Features distinguishing the new species from congeners include a longitudinally elongated caudal peduncle blotchextending from the vertical line through the adipose-fin terminus to the base of median caudal-fin rays, the number of scale series along the lateral line and between the lateral line and dorsal-fin origin, morphometric variation, and the patterns of pigmentation along the body. The species was discovered in a lesser-explored region and appears to be an endemic of the rio Aripuanã in the southern Amazon basin.
Keywords: Brazilian Shield,Characiformes, Cyphocharax spilurus clade, Madeira River, Ostariophysi.
Uma nova espécie de Cyphocharax é descrita do rio Juma, que flui ao longo da Amazônia meridional e é um tributário do rio Aripuanã no sistema fluvial do rio Madeira. Características distinguindo a nova espécie das congêneres incluem uma mancha escura, horizontalmente alongada, se estendendo da linha vertical sob o término da nadadeira adiposa à base dos raios medianos da nadadeira caudal, o número de séries de escamas ao longo da linha lateral e entre a linha lateral e origem da nadadeira dorsal, variação morfométrica e padrões de pigmentação ao longo do corpo. A espécie foi descoberta em uma região menos explorada e parece ser endêmica do rio Aripuanã no sul da bacia Amazônica.
Palavras-chave: Characiformes, Cyphocharax spilurus clade, Escudo Brasileiro, Rio Madeira, Ostariophysi.
Introduction
Cyphocharax Fowler, 1906 is the largest genus of the Neotropical freshwater fish family Curimatidae with 48 species ranging from Costa Rica to Argentina, with the epicenter of diversity being the lowlands of Greater Amazonia (Melo et al., 2021). The genus is characterized by a bifurcate laterosensory canal on the sixth infraorbital, the absence of elaborated processes in the buccopharyngeal complex, and the absence of a dark mark on the basal portion of middle dorsal-fin rays (Vari, 1989; Melo et al., 2022). Cyphocharax is recognizably non-monophyletic (Melo et al., 2018) and therefore, species are usually recognized and described based on the lack of the synapomorphies supporting Curimatella Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889, Pseudocurimata Fernández-Yépez, 1948, and Steindachnerina Fowler, 1906 (Vari, 1992).
The taxonomic revision helped to solve long-standing taxonomic problems in curimatids and provided an exceptional reference for species accounts, key of identifications, and diagnostic features for all species (Vari, 1992). Molecular phylogenetics, on the other hand, have provided a solid basis for interspecific relationships and the definition of subclades in Cyphocharax (Melo et al., 2018). The phylogeny resulted in a large group from Greater Amazonia named C. spilurus (Günther, 1864) clade containing C. boiadeiro Melo, 2017, C. gillii (Eigenmann & Kennedy, 1903), C. oenas Vari, 1992, C. saladensis (Meinken, 1933), C. spiluropsis (Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889), C. spilurus, and C. vanderi (Britski, 1980) (Melo et al., 2018). A recent update of the phylogeny split the C. spilurus clade and indicated C. sanctigabrielis Melo & Vari, 2014as sister to both C. saladensis clade (C. boiadeiro, C. caboclo Melo, Tencatt & Oliveira, 2022, C. saladensis, and C. vanderi) and C. spilurus clade (C. gillii, C. oenas, C. spiluropsis, and C. spilurus) (Melo et al., 2022).
Taxonomic studies have increased the number of species of Cyphocharax from previously unexplored regions of Amazonia. This is the case for the recently described Cyphocharax sanctigabrielis from rio Negro (Melo, Vari, 2014), C. boiadeiro from the rio Araguaia (Melo, 2017), C. cramptoni Bortolo & Lima, 2020and C. muyrakytan Bortolo, Lima & Melo, 2018from the rio Arapiuns of the lower rio Tapajós (Bortolo et al., 2018; Bortolo, Lima, 2020), and C. albiventris Netto-Ferreira, Nogueira, Melo & Dutra, 2024 from the rio Xingu (Netto-Ferreira et al., 2024). Other regions of the Brazilian Shield have also revealed new species of the genus, such as the case of C. jagunco Dutra, Penido, Mello & Pessali, 2016from the rio Jequitinhonha (Dutra et al., 2016), C. caboclo from the upper rio Paraguai (Melo et al., 2022), and C. tamuya Dutra, Vita, Gentile, Ochoa & Netto-Ferreira, 2022from the rio Paraíba do Sul (Dutra et al., 2022).
A recent expedition in the rio Juma of the Aripuanã system of the rio Madeira basin revealed a remarkably distinct species with an elongated dark blotch on the posterior midline of body and caudal peduncle region. We thus describe formally the new species of Cyphocharax and discuss its morphological features in the context of the current phylogenetic understanding of the genus.
Material and methods
Counts and measurements follow Melo, Vari (2014). Measurements were point-to-point linear distances taken with digital calipers to a precision of 0.1 mm in stereo microscopes. Measurements and counts were performed on the left side of specimens whenever possible. Scale counts above lateral line include the half scale, which is the scale observer over the predorsal midline of the body. Parentheses indicate the number of examined specimens for a particular count and asterisks designate the value for the holotype. Body proportions are given as percentages of standard length (SL), and head proportions given as percentages of head length (HL). Comparative material consists of specimens analyzed in museum collections, with type specimens being given preference. We opted not to clear and stain specimens for the description due to the limited sample size available. Locality of specimens were plotted in Google Earth Pro v. 7.3.6, exported as .kml files, and imported in QGIS v. 3.30.1. Type specimens were deposited in Laboratório de Biologia e Genética de Peixes, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Botucatu (LBP) and Museu de Diversidade Biológica, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas (ZUEC). Additional abbreviations of fish collections that include the examined comparative material follow Sabaj (2020, 2023).
Results
Cyphocharax orion, new species
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:015D806B-E348-44DB-B4BB-96048949813F
(Figs. 1–2; Tab. 1)
Holotype. LBP 34856, 72.8 mm SL, Brazil, Amazonas, Apuí, rio Juma, rio Aripuanã, Madeira system, Amazon basin, 07°16’43.31”S 60°03’23.96”W, 8 Dec 2022, T. C. Faria, I. L. P. Monteiro & M. A. Pinheiro.
Paratypes. All from rio Juma, rio Aripuanã, rio Madeira, Amazon basin, collected with holotype. LBP 33070, 4 (tissues #112660–112663), 56.2–61.8 mm SL. ZUEC 18036, 1, 77.8 mm SL.
FIGURE 1| Cyphocharax orion, LBP 34856, holotype, 72.8 mm SL, rio Juma, rio Aripuanã basin, Apuí, Amazonas, Brazil.
Diagnosis. Cyphocharax orion distinguishes from all congeners, except C. laticlavius Vari & Blackladge, 1996, C. modestus (Fernández-Yépez, 1948), C. naegelii (Steindachner, 1881), C. pantostictos Vari & Barriga Salazar, 1990, and C. sanctigabrielis,by having a horizontally elongated caudal-peduncle blotchof dark pigmentation running from the vertical line through the adipose-fin terminus to the base of median caudal-fin rays (vs. absence or blotch relatively small and confined to caudal-peduncle region). Cyphocharax orion differs from C. laticlavius by the absence of a midlateral dark stripe extending from midbase of dorsal fin to basal portions of middle caudal-fin rays (vs. presence), and head length 24.5–26.2% of SL (vs. 29.6–34.3% of SL). Cyphocharax orion differs from C. modestus by having 4.5 scales from dorsal-fin origin to lateral line (vs. 5.5–7) and head length 24.5–26.2% of SL (vs. 27–31% of SL). Cyphocharax orion differs from C. naegelii by having 29 scales in lateral line (vs. 39–45). The new speciesdiffers from C. pantostictos by the absence of dark spots over the center of scales on the lateral and dorsolateral region of the body (vs. presence) and distance from snout tip to anal-fin origin 77.5–81.3% of SL (vs. 83–85% of SL). Finally, C. orion differs from C. sanctigabrielis by having relatively thin and uniform caudal-peduncle blotch (vs. caudal-peduncle blotch thick and posteriorly wider), number of lateral-line scales 29 (vs. 31), distance between dorsal-fin origin and pelvic-fin origin 33.5–37.9% of SL (vs. 30.9–33.0% of SL), distance between dorsal- and pectoral-fin origin 34.6–37.1% of SL (vs. 32.2–34.0% of SL), and postorbital length 39.8–43.2% of SL (vs. 33.1–39.0% of SL).
Description. Morphometric data in Tab. 1. Dorsal profile of head convex from tip of snout to head at line through anterior margin of orbit; nearly straight from that point to tip of supraoccipital; slightly concave from that point to dorsal-fin origin; nearly straight to adipose-fin origin; gently concave to origin of anterior dorsal caudal-fin procurrent ray. Ventral profile convex from chin to terminus of anal-fin base; gently concave to origin of anterior ventral procurrent ray of caudal fin. Prepelvic region somewhat flattened transversely. Postpelvic region of body transversely rounded.
TABLE 1 | Morphometric data for holotype and five paratypes of Cyphocharax orion. Range includes holotype. SD = standard deviation.
| Holotype | Range | Mean | SD |
Standard length (mm) | 72.8 | 56.2–77.8 | 64.3 | – |
Percents of standard length |
|
|
|
|
Greatest body depth | 34.5 | 32.3–37.4 | 34.7 | 1.8 |
Snout to dorsal-fin origin | 48.9 | 47.0–50.0 | 48.4 | 1.2 |
Snout to pectoral-fin origin | 25.7 | 24.7–26.2 | 25.6 | 0.6 |
Snout to pelvic-fin origin | 52.3 | 51.8–53.6 | 52.6 | 0.6 |
Snout to anal-fin origin | 81.3 | 77.5–81.3 | 79.6 | 1.6 |
Dorsal-fin origin to hypural joint | 58.5 | 57.6–59.4 | 58.1 | 0.7 |
Dorsal-fin origin to anal-fin origin | 45.9 | 42.9–46.4 | 44.6 | 1.5 |
Dorsal-fin origin to pelvic-fin origin | 35.9 | 33.5–37.9 | 35.6 | 1.5 |
Dorsal-fin origin to pectoral-fin origin | 36.3 | 34.6–37.1 | 36.0 | 0.9 |
Caudal-peduncle depth | 13.2 | 12.1–13.2 | 12.5 | 0.4 |
Pectoral-fin length | 20.5 | 18.7–21.2 | 19.8 | 0.9 |
Pelvic-fin length | 21.0 | 19.5–22.2 | 21.0 | 0.9 |
Dorsal-fin length | 30.1 | 27.1–30.1 | 28.5 | 1.2 |
Head length | 24.7 | 24.5–26.2 | 25.0 | 0.6 |
Percents of head length |
|
|
|
|
Snout length | 28.3 | 25.5–30.3 | 26.6 | 1.8 |
Orbital diameter | 31.7 | 29.7–34.5 | 32.1 | 1.7 |
Postorbital length | 40.0 | 39.8–43.2 | 40.8 | 1.4 |
Interorbital width | 44.4 | 40.0–45.0 | 42.1 | 1.9 |
Head profile rounded anteriorly. Lower jaw of same size than upper jaw. Mouth subterminal, horizontally aligned with ventral margin of orbit. Nostrils separated; anterior nostril circular to ovoid, posterior nostril elongated dorsoventrally. Three thin flaps on buccopharyngeal complex. Adipose eyelid slightly developed anterior to orbit.
Dorsal fin pointed, with distal margin straight and first and second branched rays longest. Margin of pectoral fin pointed. Tip of adpressed pectoral fin reaching three or four scales short of vertical through pelvic-fin origin. Pelvic fin profile slightly rounded. Tip of adpressed pelvic fin reaching four scales short of anal-fin origin. Caudal fin forked. Adipose fin present. Anal fin emarginate, anterior branched rays one-third length of ultimate ray. Tip of adpressed anal fin reaching three scales short of origin of ventral caudal-fin ray.
Lateral line longitudinal scales from supracleithrum to hypural joint 29*(6). Continuous series of scales posterior to hypural joint 3*(6). Scales in transverse series from dorsal-fin origin to lateral line 4.5*(6). Scales in transverse series from lateral line to anal-fin origin 4*(1) or 5(5). Series of scales between anus and anal-fin origin 1(2) or 2*(4). Predorsal scales 8*(4) or 9(2). Circumpeduncular scales 16*(6).
Dorsal-fin rays iii,9*(6), first unbranched ray very short. Anal-fin rays iii,6(1) or iii,7*(5), first ray very short. Pelvic-fin rays i,8*(6). Pectoral-fin rays i,12*(3) or i,13(3). First gill arch with 8*(1) or 9(5) rakers on upper limb and 13*(1), 14(2) or 15(3) rakers on lower limb.
Coloration in alcohol. Ground coloration of formalin-fixed specimens olivaceous to silvery (Fig. 2). Dusky surface coloration, darker on dorsal portion of head; head dusky dorsolaterally and light colored ventrally. Dark chromatophores on opercle slightly larger than those on snout. Dusky surface coloration darker on dorsal and dorsolateral regions of body, with dark chromatophores dense on scales above lateral line, less concentrated on lateral line and almost absent on scales below lateral line. Reticulate pattern on almost all body due to higher concentration of dark chromatophores on scale margins, with anterior margin sometimes separated from middle region of scales by dark line of chromatophores. Reticulate pattern more conspicuous on middle region of body due to contrasting regions of scales; pattern not evident in ventral region of body, disappearing around fourth or fifth scale row below lateral line. Deep-lying, dark chromatophores forming faint, dusky midlateral stripe on body. Stripe more evident posterior of vertical through adipose-fin terminus, forming a longitudinally elongated caudal peduncle blotch that extends into base of middle caudal-fin rays. Middorsal region of body darker with dark stripe extending from tip of supraoccipital to dorsal margin of procurrent caudal-fin rays. Dorsal, anal, and caudal fins somewhat dusky with margins outlined by small, dark chromatophores. Dark pigmentation developed proximally on caudal-fin lobes, dorsal and anal fins. Pectoral and pelvic fins with rays outlined by small, dark chromatophores. Adipose fin speckled with small dark chromatophores.
FIGURE 2| Cyphocharax orion: A. ZUEC 18036, paratype, 77.8 mm SL, formalin-fixed specimen; B. LBP 33070, 57.9 mm SL, ethanol-fixed specimen; rio Juma, rio Aripuanã, Apuí, Amazonas, Brazil.
Geographical distribution. Cyphocharax orion is known from the rio Juma, which is a tributary of the rio Aripuanã, itself a right-bank tributary of the rio Madeira basin, Amazon basin (Fig. 3). Specimens were collected along the BR-230 Transamazônica between Apuí and Santo Antônio do Matupi, Amazonas, Brazil. The distribution suggests that C. orion is restricted to the Aripuanã basin.
FIGURE 3| Map of southern Amazon basin indicating the type-locality of Cyphocharax orion (black circle) in the rio Juma near the town of Apuí, Amazonas, Brazil.
Ecological notes. Cyphocharax orion was collected in a blackwater pond of rio Juma, characterized by a sand, dead leaf, and debris-filled bottom, and partially shadowed by the BR-230 Transamazônica road bridge (Fig. 4).
FIGURE 4| Rio Juma, affluent of rio Aripuanã, Apuí, Amazonas, Brazil. Photography: Tiago C. Faria.
Etymology. The epithet orion derives from Ancient Greek Ὠρίων (Ōríōn) which means “heaven’s light”, or Arion, which means “warrior”. In ancient Greek mythology, Orion was a giant hunter who, after being killed by Scorpion sent by Earth mother Gaia, either Zeus or Artemis placed in the night sky as the constellation Orion. The Orion Constellation contains the Great Orion Nebula, one of the brightest nebulae in the visible sky, and the Orion’s Belt asterism formed by three bright blue supergiants: the triple star system Alnitak, the major star Alnilam, and the multiple star system Mintaka. The name Cyphocharax orion is in allusion to three major southern Amazonian rivers Madeira, Aripuanã (type-locality), and Tapajós, and symbolizes the resistance to anthropogenic pressures with strength, bravery, and universe brilliance. A noun in apposition.
Conservation status. The region has been impacted with diffuse human activities, like the construction of the BR-230 Transamazônica road that longitudinally spans the Amazon rainforest and Caatinga from Lábrea-Amazonas to Cabedelo-Paraíba in northeastern Brazil. However, at least three enormous, protected areas exist near the type-locality: the Floresta Nacional do Aripuanã, the Floresta Nacional do Jatuarana, and the Parque Nacional do Acari. The small sample size is likely due to the lack of fieldwork efforts in the region. Given the current information, we suggest the category Least Concern (LC) for Cyphocharax orion under the categories and criteria of the International Union for Conservation Nature (IUCN Standards and Petitions Subcommittee, 2022).
Discussion
The extremely elongated dark mark on the caudal peduncle is the defining morphological feature of Cyphocharax orion (Figs. 1–2). Although other species of the genus including C. laticlavius, C. modestus, C. naegelii, C. pantostictos, and C. sanctigabrielis have an elongated blotch, our current phylogenetic understanding of the relationships suggests that it represents a homoplastic condition. For example, C. modestus has been hypothesized to be the sister species of C. naegelii, C. platanus (Günther, 1880), and C. spilotus (Vari, 1987) in the Cyphocharax gilbert (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824)clade (Melo et al., 2018), whereas C. sanctigabrielis is a distinct lineage sister to both C. saladensis clade and C. spilurus clade (Melo et al., 2022). Characteristics such as those related to body coloration have been documented to occur independently across the phylogeny of Curimatidae (Melo et al., 2018), and recent research indicates that the dark blotch on the caudal peduncle of curimatids has evolved at least eight times during their evolutionary history (Netto-Ferreira et al., 2024). Therefore, the existence of an elongated mark in C. orion and the aforementioned species are not suggestive of their relationship, and further research is required to determine the placement of the new species.
The rio Aripuanã contains several endemic species and is an affluent of the rio Madeira, one of the largest and most species-rich hydrographic systems of the Amazon basin with over 820 fish species (Zanata, Ohara, 2009; Queiroz et al., 2013; Deprá et al., 2014; Silva et al., 2019; Menezes et al., 2020). In the chapter “Curimatidae” of the book “Peixes do rio Madeira”, Vari, Röpke (2013) listed four species of Cyphocharax: C. leucostictus (Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889), C. notatus (Steindachner, 1908), C. plumbeus (Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889), and C. spiluropsis, none of them having the morphological attributes of C. orion. In the study conducted in the headwaters of rio Aripuanã tributaries, Fernandes et al. (2013) reported 64 specimens of C. notatus and 54 specimens of C. spilurus. In the survey of the rio Aripuanã near the Dardanelos-Andorinhas waterfall complex, Silva et al. (2019) reported 82 Cyphocharax gr. spilurus specimens. Despite the lack of photographs of these specimens, the usually rounded dark blotch on the caudal peduncle of specimens from the Brazilian Shield is characteristic of C. spiluropsis (BFM, pers. obs.), or the endemics C. boiadeiro from upper Araguaia, C. gangamon Vari, 1992 from the lower Tapajós, and C. gouldingi Vari, 1992 from Amapá, lower Amazonas and Tocantins-Araguaia (Vari, 1992; Melo et al., 2016;Melo, 2017). Therefore, the existing evidence indicates that C. orion is not present in other sections of the Aripuanã or Madeira basins.
Cyphocharax orion was discovered in a blackwater pond of the rio Juma beneath the BR-230 Transamazônica road, which transverses through several Amazonian cities including Humaitá in Amazonas and Itaituba in Pará. Existing information based on fieldwork suggests that the species could potentially be found along the rio Juma in the southeastern Amazonas state surrounding the three protected areas Floresta Nacional do Aripuanã, Floresta Nacional do Jatuarana, and Parque Nacional do Acari. Road access may potentially exacerbate deforestation and habitat loss in the area, hence imposing a direct influence on freshwater ecosystems near the type-locality. Nevertheless, additional assessment of habitat conservation efforts throughout the region is necessary to have a more comprehensive understanding and quantify the actual consequences for C. orion as well as other sympatric species.
Comparative material examined. Brazil: Cyphocharax abramoides: INPA 3719, 6, 61.7–106.1 mm SL, rio Negro. Cyphocharax albiventris: MPEG 35000, holotype, 79.9 mm SL, rio Xingu. Cyphocharax aninha: MZUSP 113703, 2 paratypes, 24.6–27.0 mm SL, rio Paru. Cyphocharax boiadeiro: LIRP 14133, holotype, 42.9 mm SL, rio Araguaia. Cyphocharax caboclo: MNRJ 52506, holotype, 59.1 mm SL, rio Correntes. Cyphocharax corumbae: MZUSP 52361, holotype of Steindachnerina corumbae, 109.7 mm SL, rio Pirapitinga. Cyphocharax gangamon: MZUSP 22037, holotype, 48.4 mm SL, rio Tapajós. Cyphocharax gilbert: LBP 3460, 3, 49.5–70.7 mm SL, rio Itabapoana. Cyphocharax gillii: LBP 10789, 16, 24.8–67.0 mm SL, rio Paraguai. Cyphocharax gouldingi: MZUSP 41762, holotype, 94.0 mm SL, rio Cupixi. Cyphocharax aff. helleri: INPA 3261, 15, 78.5–112.5 mm SL, rio Trombetas. Cyphocharax leucostictus: MCZ 787, lectotype of Curimatus leucostictus, 104.3 mm SL, rio Negro. Cyphocharax mestomyllon: MZUSP 41755, holotype, 36.0 mm SL, rio Negro. Cyphocharax modestus: LBP 19718, 3, 118–128.3 mm SL, rio Tietê. Cyphocharax multilineatus: LBP 6935, 3, 34.0–73.4 mm SL, rio Negro. Cyphocharax muyrakytan: LBP 23759, 5 paratypes, 48.1–58.9 mm SL, rio Arapiuns. Cyphocharax naegelii: NMW 68808, 1 syntype of Curimatus naegelii, 110.3 mm SL. Cyphocharax nigripinnis: MZUSP 42025, holotype, 53.3 mm SL, rio Xeruini. Cyphocharax notatus: NMW 75793, holotype of Curimatus notatus, 75.0 mm SL, Pará. Cyphocharax pinnilepis: USNM 298248, 4 paratypes, 31.2–98.5 mm SL, rio Gongogi. Cyphocharax plumbeus: MCZ 31493, lectotype of Curimatus plumbeus, 94.8 mm SL, Paraná do Janauari. Cyphocharax saladensis: LBP 6034, 8, 28.1–43.0 mm SL, rio Maquiné. Cyphocharax sanctigabrielis: MZUSP 115004, holotype, 60.7 mm SL, rio Negro. LBP 6963, 6 paratypes, 44.3–67.0 mm SL, rio Negro. Cyphocharax santacatarinae: LBP 766, 1, 39.0 mm SL, rio Marumbi. Cyphocharax signatus: MZUSP 41757, holotype, 33.8 mm SL, rio Araguaia. Cyphocharax spilotus: USNM 285194, 10 paratypes of Curimata spilota, 35.9–60.6 mm SL, rio Santa Maria. Cyphocharax spiluropsis: MCZ 92961, lectotype of Curimatus spiluropsis, 65.6 mm SL, rio Içá. MCZ 20218, 5 paralectotypes of Curimatus spiluropsis, 49.0–53.9 mm SL, rio Içá. Cyphocharax spilurus: INPA 7886, 2, rio Takutu. FMNH 122066, rio Takutu. Cyphocharax stilbolepis: MZUSP 41759, holotype, 108.1 mm SL, rio Xingu. Cyphocharax vanderi: MZUSP 4325, holotype, 42.6 mm SL, upper rio Paraná. Cyphocharax voga: LBP 17002, 9, 36.0–42.3 mm SL, Laguna dos Patos. Colombia: Cyphocharax magdalenae: NMW 68873, lectotype of Curimatus magdalenae, 128.7 mm SL, río Magdalenae. Ecuador: Cyphocharax laticlavius: FMNH 101503, holotype, 51.9 mm SL, río Napo. Cyphocharax pantostictos: USNM 306594, holotype, 72.5 mm SL, Laguna de Jatuncocha. Cyphocharax punctatus: FMNH 101731, río Napo. Peru: Cyphocharax derhami: AMNH 274311, río Ucayali. Cyphocharax festivus: USNM 280426, holotype, río Nanay. Cyphocharax vexillapinnus: USNM 296394, holotype, 62.6 mm SL, río Itaya. MZUSP 41761, 3 paratypes, 50.8–55.0 mm SL, río Itaya. Suriname: Cyphocharax biocellatus: ANSP 189146, holotype, 62.8 mm SL, Litanie basin. Cyphocharax microcephalus: MCZ 785, holotype of Curimatus microcephalus, 104.0 mm SL, no exact locality. Cyphocharax punctatus: USNM 275000, holotype, 25.7 mm SL, Marowijne basin. Uruguay: Cyphocharax platanus: ANSP 203188, 6, 90.6–119.6 mm SL, río de La Plata. Venezuela: Cyphocharax aspilos: USNM 121311, 2 paratypes, 104.6–108.5 mm SL, Río Palmar. Cyphocharax meniscaprorus: USNM 235484, 13 paratypes, río Aro. Cyphocharax oenas: USNM 235485, 10 paratypes, 31.8–46.5 mm SL, río Orinoco.
Acknowledgments
Authors are thankful to Claudio Oliveira (LBP) for funding the fieldwork to the rio Juma in December 2022, to Flávio C. T. Lima (ZUEC) for curatorial assistance with types, and James R. García-Ayala (LBP) for assistance with photographs. We are also grateful to Rafaela P. Ota (UFGD), Fernando R. Carvalho (UFMS), and an anonymous reviewer for improving the manuscript. Research received financial support from CNPq Universal grant of Biodiversity of Curimatidae proc. 404991/2018–1 (BFM), the AMNH Axelrod Research Curatorship (BFM), and FAPESP proc. 2021/00242–0 (TCF).
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Authors
Bruno F. Melo1 and Tiago C. Faria2
[1] Department of Ichthyology, American Museum of Natural History, 200 Central Park West, NY 10024 New York, USA. (BFM) bmelo@amnh.org (corresponding author).
[2] Departamento de Biologia Estrutural e Funcional, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Rua Prof. Dr. Antônio C. W. Zanin 250, 18618-689 Botucatu, SP, Brazil. (TCF) tc.faria@unesp.br.
Authors’ Contribution
Bruno F. Melo: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Writing-original draft, Writing-review and editing.
Tiago C. Faria: Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Validation, Visualization, Writing-review and editing.
Ethical Statement
Specimens were collected under permission license of Sistema de Autorização e Informação em Biodiversidade (SISBIO #13843–5).
Competing Interests
The author declares no competing interests.
How to cite this article
Melo BF, Faria TC. Description of a new species of Cyphocharax from the rio Juma, rio Aripuanã basin, southern Amazon basin (Teleostei: Curimatidae). Neotrop Ichthyol. 2024; 22(1):e230122. https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-2023-0122
Copyright
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Distributed under
Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0
© 2024 The Authors.
Diversity and Distributions Published by SBI
Accepted January 31, 2024 by Fernando Carvalho
Submitted November 6, 2023
Epub April 5, 2024