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This paper presents a preliminary revision of the venezuelan species of the genus Bryconops (sensu KNOPPEL and Col. 1968). Autanichthys is considered a synonym of Bryconops. We record the occurence in Venezuela of B. alburnoides, B. caudomaculatus, B. giacopinii, B. inpai and one species morphologically similar to B. affinis which we have identified as Bryconops cf affinis. B. melanurus and B. affinis, species widely cited for the Orinoco basin, are not present in Venezuela: citations of these species for the area are misidentifications.
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... Morphometric and meristic data were taken following Fink & Weitzman (1974) and Machado-Allison et al. (1993. Measurements were taken with digital calipers to the nearest 0.1 mm on the left side of the specimen, and are expressed as percentages of standard length (SL), except for subunits of the head, which are recorded as percentages of head length (HL). ...
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A new species of Bryconops is described from the rio Maicuru, a tributary of the left margin of the lower Amazon River, Pará, 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. colane-gra 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.
... Counts were taken according to Malabarba & Bertaco (1999). Measurements were calculated as interlandmark distances based on 14 homologous landmarks acquired with a digital camera, following Machado-Allison et al. (1993, 1996, Malabarba & Bertaco (1999) and Wingert & Malabarba (2011). Institutional abbreviations follow Sabaj (2016). ...
Article
A new species of Bryconops is described from upper rio Juruena drainage, rio Tapajós 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.
... Maxilar com um a três dentes em ambos os lados. A distinção entre B. giacopinii e B. melanurus, discutida por Machado-Allison et al. (1993) e Chernoff et al. (1994), não considera a grande variação no grau de pigmentação da nadadeira caudal existente entre diferentes populações de Bryconops através da bacia amazônica, incluindo exemplares da espécie da bacia do rio Madeira. Preferimos identificar as populações da bacia do rio Madeira como Bryconops cf. ...
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A família Characidae é a mais diversa da ordem Characiformes, compreendendo 1125 espécies atualmente consideradas válidas (não incluindo Acestrorhynchidae e Cynodontidae, consideradas subfamílias de Characidae por Mirande, 2010). Characidae também é a família de Characiformes mais amplamente distribuída, com representantes ocorrendo desde o sul dos Estados Unidos, até a Patagônia argentina e o centro do Chile. A maior parte da diversidade da família, contudo, concentra-se do Panamá ao rio da Prata e mais particularmente, nas bacias do norte da América do Sul cis-andina (bacia amazônica, rios guianenses e bacia do rio Orinoco). A família Characidae é muito diversa morfologicamente. Compreende desde alguns dos maiores Characiformes, como os dourados (Salminus spp., atingindo até 100 cm de comprimento e 30 kg de peso) até alguns dos menores peixes sul-americanos, como as espécies do gênero Xenurobrycon (subfamília Stevardiinae) e Priocharax (subfamília Heterocharacinae; Mattox & Toledo-Piza, 2012), ambos os gêneros com menos de dois centímetros quando adultos. Muitas espécies de caracídeos de pequeno porte são importantes no comércio internacional de peixes ornamentais, entre as quais se destaca o tetra cardinal (Paracheirodon axelrodi) e os tetras rosados (Hyphessobrycon spp.), com milhões de indivíduos exportados anualmente da bacia do médio e alto rio Negro no Brasil. Usamos aqui a delimitação da família Characidae empregada por Reis et al. (2003) (com exceção da exclusão da família Serrasalmidae e do gênero Chalceus, pontos consensuais entre hipóteses morfológicas e moleculares); existem, contudo, duas hipóteses recentes das inter-relações na família, uma com base em caracteres morfológicos (Mirande, 2010) e outra desenvolvida a partir de dados moleculares (Oliveira et al., 2011), que propõem classificações bem distintas: Mirande (2010) incorpora famílias como Cynodontidae e Acestrorhynchidae dentro de Characidae, enquanto que Oliveira et al. (2011) reconhecem diversas famílias adicionais, porém sem diagnoses claras. Capítulo 19
... Methods for taking morphometric and meristic data followed Fink & Weitzman (1974) and Machado-Allison et al. (1993, 1996, except for counts of horizontal scale rows below the lateral line that were taken following Malabarba & Bertaco (1999). All measurements were taken point to point, on the left side of the body, with digital caliper to the nearest 0.1 mm, and are summarized in the species accounts and table as percentages of Standard Length (SL) or Head Length (HL). ...
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A new species of Bryconops is described from a right tributary of the lower Tapajós River, State of Pará, Brazil. Bryconops munduruku, sp. nov., differs from its congeners, except B. inpai and B. piracolina, by having a black adipose fin (vs. ad-ipose fin hyaline in alcohol) and, except B. inpai, by possessing two humeral blotches (vs. lack of humeral blotch or only one humeral blotch). Bryconops munduruku differs from B. inpai by having a uniform color pattern on the posterior portion of the side of the body (vs. a dark stripe extending posteriorly from the half of the anal-fin base onto the base of the middle caudal-fin rays). It differs further from B. inpai and B. piracolina by the presence of a black adipose fin that is hyaline along its base (vs. entirely black adipose fin in B. inpai and B. piracolina). The new species is allocated in the subgenus Creatochanes by having a maxillary bone with one to three teeth on both sides, and its posterior extension reaching the junction of second and third infraorbital bones.
... Maxilar com um a três dentes em ambos os lados. A distinção entre B. giacopinii e B. melanurus, discutida por Machado-Allison et al. (1993) e Chernoff et al. (1994, não considera a grande variação no grau de pigmentação da nadadeira caudal existente entre diferentes populações de Bryconops através da bacia amazônica, incluindo exemplares da espécie da bacia do rio Madeira. Preferimos identificar as populações da bacia do rio Madeira como Bryconops cf. ...
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Este libro recopila y aporta nueva información acerca de las condiciones sobre la historia natural de algunas especies de peces que son comunes de la región de los llanos. También se discuten varias hipótesis del efecto de factores abióticos y bióticos sobre el origen y diversidad de especies en el Llano de Venezuela. Se plantean, por otro lado, diversas problemáticas acerca del potencial pesquero y pesquerías en estas áreas, posibilidades del desarrollo piscícola y de conservación de la fauna silvestre; líneas de investigación y planes a desarrollar que permitirán obtener información básica y aplicada para la utilización y éxito de programas de manejo adecuado de los recursos naturales y pesqueros.
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A revision of the cis-andean species of Brycon, with the exception of the Brycon pesu species-complex, is presented. Twenty-one Brycon species (including B. pesu) are recognized from cis-andean river systems: Brycon stolzmanni Steindachner, from the upper Río Marañon basin, Peru; Brycon coxeyi Fowler, from the Río Marañon basin, Ecuador and Peru; Brycon polylepis Moscó Morales, from the Lago de Maracaibo, Río Orinoco, upper rio Amazonas, and rio Tocantins basins, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, and Brazil; Brycon coquenani Steindachner, from the upper Río Caroni, Río Orinoco basin, Venezuela; Brycon insignis Steindachner, from the rio Paraíba do Sul and small adjacent coastal river basins of eastern Brazil; Brycon vermelha Lima & Castro, endemic from the rio Mucuri basin, eastern Brazil; Brycon howesi new species, endemic from the rio Jequitinhonha basin, Brazil; Brycon dulcis new species, endemic from the rio Doce basin, eastern Brazil; Brycon ferox Steindachner, from several small coastal river systems, including the rio Mucuri basin in eastern Brazil; Brycon vonoi new species, from the rio Pardo basin and apparently also from a adjacent river system, the rio Una, in eastern Brazil; Brycon opalinus (Cuvier), from the headwaters of the rio Paraíba do Sul and rio Doce basins, eastern Brazil; Brycon nattereri Günther, from the headwaters of the upper rio Paraná, rio São Francisco, and upper rio Tocantins basins, Brazil; Brycon orthotaenia Günther, endemic from the rio São Francisco basin, Brazil; Brycon orbignyanus (Valenciennes), from the rio Paraná and rio Uruguai basins, Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and Uruguay; Brycon hilarii (Valenciennes), from the rio Paraguai, middle rio Paraná, and upper rio Amazonas basins, Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, Peru, and Ecuador; Brycon whitei Myers & Weitzman, from the Río Orinoco basin in Colombia and Venezuela; Brycon amazonicus (Agassiz), from the Rio Amazonas and Río Orinoco basins, Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Bolivia, Venezuela, and Guyana; Brycon gouldingi Lima, endemic from the rio Tocantins basin, Brazil; Brycon melanopterus (Cope), from the western and central rio Amazonas basin, Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia; and Brycon falcatus Müller & Troschel, widespread in the the rio Amazonas and Río Orinoco basins, and several guyanese river systems, in Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana. All species are redescribed and illustrated, and a key to the species is provided. Comments on the diagnosis of the genus Brycon, the biogeography of the cis-andean species, and their current conservation status, are presented.
BLOCH, 1875) C. affinis (GUNTHER, 1864) C. gracilis EIGENMANN
  • C Melanurus
C. melanurus (BLOCH, 1875) C. affinis (GUNTHER, 1864) C. gracilis EIGENMANN, 1908
melanurus (BLOCH, 1875) C. affinis (GUNTHER, 1864) C. gracilis (EIGENMANN, 1908) C. cyrtogaster (NORMAN, 1926) C. inpai KNOPPEL y Col
  • C Creatocbanes
Creatocbanes C. melanurus (BLOCH, 1875) C. affinis (GUNTHER, 1864) C. gracilis (EIGENMANN, 1908) C. cyrtogaster (NORMAN, 1926) C. inpai KNOPPEL y Col. 1968