Early life history of two Neotropical Triportheidae fish (Characiformes)

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Abstract

The early ontogeny of Triportheus albus and T. angulatus, two fish species of Triportheidae, is described using morphological, meristic, and morphometric characters. These species are exploited by subsistence fisheries and have potential as an alternative source of fish, given the decline in the natural stocks of other commercially important fish species in the Amazon. The specimens were collected in the open water limnetic zone, under of the macrophyte stands, and in subsurface areas near sandbars in the Amazon basin. Intra and interspecific morphometric analyzes were performed to evaluate growth models between species. The combination of color pattern, body morphology, morphometric proportions and myomeres number distinguishes the species from each other and from other congeners. Some morphometric relationships related to head as snout length and eye diameter as well as length from the snout to the origins of anal and length from the snout to the origins of pelvic, related with standard length were different between the two species of Triportheus, reflecting different growth models between them. An identification key for larvae and juveniles of some species of Triportheus from the Eastern Amazon is presented.

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Cajado, R. A., Silva, F. K. S., Oliveira, L. S., Dos Santos, Z., Bialetzki, A., & Zacardi, D. M. (2023). Early life history of two Neotropical Triportheidae fish (Characiformes). Neotropical Ichthyology, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-2022-0102

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