Farlowella nattereri Steindachner, 1910
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.3.e4162 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FED6336B-37D2-7811-1ACF-2E8958DE3421 |
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Farlowella nattereri Steindachner, 1910 |
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Farlowella nattereri Steindachner, 1910 View in CoL View at ENA
Materials
Type status: Other material. Occurrence: catalogNumber: 43891 ; recordedBy: Valéria Nogueira Machado; Emanuell Duarte Ribeiro; Rupert A. Collins; individualCount: 1; otherCatalogNumbers: UFAM:CTGA:14331; associatedSequences: KP772581; Taxon: scientificName: Farlowella nattereri Steindachner, 1910; kingdom: Animalia; phylum: Chordata; class: Actinopterygii; order: Siluriformes; family: Loricariidae; genus: Farlowella; specificEpithet: nattereri; scientificNameAuthorship: Steindachner, 1910; Location: country: Brazil; stateProvince: Pará; locality: Lower Nhamunda River ; decimalLatitude: -1.6909; decimalLongitude: -57.42231; geodeticDatum: WGS84; Identification: identifiedBy: Rupert A. Collins; Event: eventDate: 2013-11; Record Level: institutionCode: INPA; basisOfRecord: PreservedSpecimen GoogleMaps
Notes
Identification to species level follows Retzer and Page (1997) and Retzer (2006) based on the following characters: seven predorsal plates; dorsal fin located opposite anal fin; three rows of abdominal plates; five rows of anterior lateral plates, with middle row incomplete; plates of second lateral row diamond-shaped; fourth row of anterior lateral plates sharply keeled; odontodes on lateral plates small; snout-mouth-length / head-length> 0.5; body-depth / pelvic-fin-length <0.86; pectoral-fin-length / snout-mouth-length> 0.65; snout-mouth-length / pectoral-fin-length> 1.0; and fin spines and rays with dark spots.
The above characters are consistent with F. nattereri , but some key differences in colour pattern are noted. Retzer and Page (1997) report: for most specimens of F. nattereri , the first anal and dorsal fin rays are entirely darkly pigmented (our specimen has spotted rays); a distinct dorso-lateral dark-stripe is present from base of snout to dorsal fin (this stripe was not apparent in the preserved specimen, but was observed in life); and upper and lower caudal fin lobes pigmented with dark stripes of equal size, with stripes often not reaching caudal fin base (the stripes in our specimen reached the caudal base). Retzer and Page (1997) recognise that F. nattereri probably comprises a complex of species.
One individual was caught by hand from shallow, fast flowing water over a rocky/sandy substrate (sampling site NH05). The live specimen is pictured in Fig. 24 (caudal fin in Fig. 25)
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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