Astyanax Baird & Girard

J. M. Mirande, G. Aguilera & M. D. L. M. Azpelicueta, 2006, Astyanax endy (Characiformes: Characidae), a new fish species from the upper Río Bermejo basin, northwestern Argentina., Zootaxa 1286, pp. 57-68 : 58

publication ID

z01286p057

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:89EB739D-FFDE-44FD-AD0F-9E51CC3392FD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6260707

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/96317A89-DC5A-77C8-74A6-D27A581AC0C8

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Astyanax Baird & Girard
status

 

[[ Astyanax Baird & Girard View in CoL View at ENA   ZBK ]]

The genus Astyanax Baird & Girard   ZBK includes more than 100 nominal species (Garutti & Britski, 2000) distributed from southern United States to the Río Negro in Argentina ( Almirón et al., 1997). The genus is diagnosed by the presence of two series of teeth in the premaxilla, the first series with a variable number of teeth and the second series with equal or graduated teeth, usually five in number; crowns of premaxillary and mandibulary teeth usually ridged and denticulated; maxillary with few or no teeth; a complete lateral line; absence of a predorsal spine; and scales present on caudal-fin base. Several of these features are broadly distributed among characid fishes, however, and there are no phylogenetic studies that support monophyly of the genus.

Eight species of Astyanax   ZBK are presently considered to occur in northwestern Argentina: A. fasciatus (Cuvier) ; A. eigenmanniorum (Cope) ; A. asuncionensis Gery   ZBK ; A. abramis (Jenyns) ; A. lineatus (Perugia) ; A. latens Mirande, Aguilera & Azpelicueta   ZBK ; A. chico Casciotta& Almiron   ZBK ; and A. tumbayaensis Miquelarena & Menni   ZBK . Of these, only the last three have their type localities within this area. Astyanax fasciatus and A. eigenmanniorum were described from the Río San Francisco basin and Rio Grande do Sul, respectively, both in Brazil (Cuvier, 1819; Cope, 1894), with the latter species subsequently considered to be restricted to the Laguna dos Patos system (Malabarba, 1989). The remaining species were described from the Paraguay and Paraná basins. Several species with anal-fin ray and lateral line scale counts similar to A. eigenmanniorum have been described from Argentina in recent years (e. g. Azpelicueta & García, 2000; Azpelicueta et al., 2002a, 2002b; Almirón et al., 2002; Casciotta & Almirón, 2004; Casciotta et al., 2005; Miquelarena et al., 2005; Miquelarena & Menni, 2005). The purpose of this paper is to describe another species, also similar to A. eigenmanniorum , that is broadly distributed in the upper Río Bermejo basin of northwestern Argentina.

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