TL;DR: A new species of Bryconops is described from upper rio Juruena drainage, rio Tapajós basin, Amazon basin, state of Mato Grosso, Brazil, and hypothesized as belonging to the subgenus Creatochanes by presenting the posterior extension of maxilla reaching to the junction of second and third infraorbital bones.
Abstract: A new species of Bryconops is described from upper rio Juruena drainage, rio Tapajos basin, Amazon basin, state of Mato Grosso, Brazil. The new species is hypothesized as belonging to the subgenus Creatochanes by presenting the posterior extension of maxilla reaching to the junction of second and third infraorbital bones, and the ventroposterior margin of second infraorbital forming a complete border with third infraorbital, resulting in the lack of a naked area between them. The new species is easily distinguished from other species of the subgenus Creatochanes by the color pattern of the caudal fin, which consists of the dorsal lobe conspicuously dark pigmented on its distal half and the ventral lobe dark gray pigmented along its ventral portion below the horizontal through the ventral margin of the caudal peduncle.
TL;DR: Ulastructural analysis revealed that the zona pellucida is formed during the previtellogenic stage of the gametogenesis of Bryconops affinis and may be related to the egg's adherence to the substrata.
Abstract: The gametogenesis of Bryconops affinis was studied by light, transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The spermatogenesis is semi-cystic and spermatids are released into the lumen of seminiferous tubules, where spermiogenesis is completed. Spermatozoa have an ovoid head, a rudimentary middle piece with a small number of mitochondria and long flagellum (primitive spermatozoa). The Sertoli and Leydig cells show secretory activity during spermatogenesis. By the end of this phenomenon, the Sertoli cells phagocytize the residual spermatozoa, while the Leydig cells show involuted characteristics. With regard to the oogenesis process, the oocyte development was divided into four stages based on the cytological characteristics of the oocyte and its surrounding layers. Ultrastructural analysis revealed that the zona pellucida is formed during the previtellogenic stage. Specializations associated to the outer layer of the zona pellucida may be related to the egg's adherence to the substrata.
TL;DR: A new species of Bryconops is described from the rio Maicuru, a tributary of the left margin of the lower Amazon River, Pará, Brazil, which is assigned to the subgenus Creatochanes by the number of maxillary teeth, and ossification and denticulation of the gill rakers.
Abstract: A new species of Bryconops is described from the rio Maicuru, a tributary of the left margin of the lower Amazon River, Para, Brazil. Bryconops chernoffi new species, differs from all its congeners by the presence of an elongated dark patch of pigmentation immediately after the posterodorsal margin of the opercle, running vertically from the supracleithrum to the distal margin of the cleithrum (vs. absence of a similar blotch), and by a dark dorsal fin with a narrow hyaline band at middle portion of dorsal-fin rays (vs. dorsal fin hyaline or with few scattered chromatophores). It differs further from all its congeners, except B. colanegra, by the presence of a blurred black stripe at the anal fin base. It differs from B. colanegra by possessing fewer predorsal scales (8-9 vs. 10-11) and in that the third infraorbital contacts the preopercle ventrally (vs. third infraorbital not contacting preopercle ventrally). The new species is assigned to the subgenus Creatochanes by the number of maxillary teeth, and ossification and denticulation of the gill rakers.
TL;DR: Two new allocreadiid trematodes are described from the intestine of characid fishes from Rio Itaya, a tributary of the Amazon River near Iquitos, Peru, and a framework for revaluating the classification of Allocreadiidae is provided.
Abstract: Two new allocreadiid trematodes are described from the intestine of characid fishes from Rio Itaya, a tributary of the Amazon River near Iquitos, Peru. Auriculostoma foliaceum n. sp. is described from Bryconops cf. caudomaculatus (Gunther, 1864) Backup, 2003, and Auriculostoma diagonale n. sp. from Stethaprion cf. erythrops Cope, 1870. Auriculostoma foliaceum n. sp. differs from its congeners by having a foliated lateral margin and lacking vitelline follicles in the forebody. Auriculostoma diagonale n. sp. differs from all of its congeners except Auriculostoma platense (Szidat, 1954) Scholz, Aguirre-Macedo, and Choudhury, 2004, by having oblique rather than tandem testes and differs from A. platense by having a much more elongated cirrus sac. Phylogenetic hypotheses based on analyses of 3 alignments of partial sequences of the 28S rDNA gene conducted in this study provide a framework for revaluating the classification of Allocreadiidae Looss, 1902. The present analyses show that (1) Paracreptot...
TL;DR: The increased streamlining of the highland specimens is highly consistent with known inductive effects of high water velocity on fish phenotypes and genetic differentiation and induction effects of temperature variation are also potential explanations of the observed phenotypic differentiation.
Abstract: Morphometric analyses of 220 specimens of a characid, Bryconops sp. cf. melanurus, from the Brazilian Pantanal were used to describe allometric growth in that species and determine whether specimens from highland habitats were more streamlined than those from lowland habitats. Relative warp analysis of 14 landmarks and principal component analysis of 28 interlandmark distances returned complementary results. The increased streamlining of the highland specimens is highly consistent with known inductive effects of high water velocity on fish phenotypes. Genetic differentiation and inductive effects of temperature variation are also potential explanations of the observed phenotypic differentiation.