Aspistor
Main Authors: | Alexandre P. Marceniuk, Naércio A. Menezes |
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Format: | info publication-taxonomictreatment Journal |
Terbitan: |
, 2007
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
https://zenodo.org/record/6236807 |
Daftar Isi:
- Aspistor Jordan & Evermann, 1898 (fig. 10) Aspistor Jordan & Evermann, 1898: 2763. Type species: Arius luniscutis Valenciennes, 1840. Type by original designation. Gender: masculine. Diagnosis. Aspistor can be diagnosed by the following combination of exclusive (1 to 4) and shared characters(5 to 13): (1) tooth plates associated with vomer usually fused as a single large plate, indistinct in adult specimens; (2) bony blade associated with urohyal medial process approximately of same width for its entire length (fig. 11); (3) anterior and median nuchal plates forming a well developed butterfly shaped structure (fig. 12); (4) anterior margin of nuchal plate slightly concave (fig. 12); (5) lateral processes of vomer very wide (shared with Arius, Bagre, Batrachocephalus, Cinetodus, Galeichthys, Nemapteryx, Notarius planiceps, Osteogeneiosus, Pachyula, Plicofollis tenuispinis, Plicofollis platystomus, Potamosilurus and Sciades); (6) accessory tooth plates longitudinally elongate, anteriorly wide and becoming progressively narrower toward its posterior part [shared with Arius (with exception of A. caelatus, A. dispar and A. madagascariensis), Osteogeneiosus and Plicofollis]; (7) accessory tooth plates ventral to orbitosphenoid and metapterygoid [shared with Arius (with exception of A. caelatus and A. madagascariensis), Osteogeneiosus and Plicofollis]; (8) accessory tooth plates bearing molariform teeth [shared with Arius (with exception of A. caelatus and A. madagascariensis), Batrachocephalus, Cathorops (with exception of C. dasycephalus), Osteogeneiosus and Plicofollis]; (9) epioccipital dorsally exposed (fig. 12) [shared with Amphiarius rugispinis, Carlarius, Cinetodus, Pachyula and Plicofollis (with exception of P. platystomus and P. tenuispinis)]; (10) posterior margin of occipital process convex (fig. 12) (shared with Sciades proops); (11) nuchal plate overlaying occipital process (shared with Notarius troschelii, Sciades emphysetus and S. proops); (12) lateral processes of urohyal, half as long medial process (fig. 11) (shared with Arius, Batrachocephalus, Cathorops, Cephalocassis borneensis, Cinetodus, Genidens, Ketengus, Osteogeneiosus, Nedystoma, Nemapteryx, Netuma thalassinus and Pachyula); (13) posterior portion of second basibranchial very short and robust (fig. 13) (shared with Arius gagora, A. maculatus and Plicofollis). Supplementary morphological characters. Cephalic shield granulated visible under the skin; a moderately developed fenestra limited by frontal and lateral ethmoid bones visible under the skin; medial groove of neurocranium limited by frontal bones and/or on supraoccipital absent; posterior cranial fontanel oval, clearly differentiated; fenestra limited by supraoccipital, pterotic and sphenotic absent; fossa limited by pterotic, supracleithrum and extrascapular relatively large; epioccipital invading into dorsal portion of cephalic shield; occipital process very short and wide at base, round shaped; anterior and median nuchal plates fused and indistinct, forming a butterfly shaped large structure; vomerine tooth plates absent; accessory tooth plates longitudinally elongated, with molar-like teeth; maxillary barbel fleshy and cylindrical; two pairs of mental barbels; base of adipose fin very long, as long as anal-fin base; lateral line not bifurcated at caudal region, reaching base of caudal-fin upper lobe; cleithrum wide, with a second dorsal process on its upper portion; posterior cleithral process moderately long and distinct from second dorsal process of cleithrum. Distribution and habitat. North and eastern South America, marine and brackish waters.
- Published as part of Alexandre P. Marceniuk & Naércio A. Menezes, 2007, Systematics of the family Ariidae (Ostariophysi, Siluriformes), with a redefinition of the genera., pp. 1-126 in Zootaxa 1416 on pages 21-22