A new species of Amaralia fowler (siluriformes: Aspredinidae) from the Paraná-Paraguay River Basin

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Abstract

A new species of the banjo catfish genus Amaralia is described from the Paraná-Paraguay River Basin in central-western Brazil, Paraguay and northern Argentina. Amaralia oviraptor is distinguished from its single and allopatric congener, Amaralia hypsiura, by the greater number of dorsal-fin rays (3 vs. 2); by the absence of lateral contact between middle and posterior nuchal plates (vs. middle and posterior nuchal plates contacting each other laterally); and by a longer cleithral process (17.4-19.5 % of SL, mean 18.2 % vs. 14.0-17.2 % of SL, mean=15.5 %). Comments on the peculiar oophagic diet of Amaralia and an extended diagnosis of the genus are provided.

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Friel, J. P., & Carvalho, T. P. (2016). A new species of Amaralia fowler (siluriformes: Aspredinidae) from the Paraná-Paraguay River Basin. Zootaxa, 4088(4), 531–546. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4088.4.4

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