Description:
Can be distinguished from all other Ancistrini except
Spectracanthicus by having dentary teeth
with longer shafts and larger cusps than premaxillary
teeth; from all other Ancistrini except Megalancistrus,
Acanthicus, and Panaque (Panaque)
by having an enlarged gas bladder and bladder capsule
whose posterior margin reaches the expanded rib of
the sixth vertebral centrum and whose laterodorsal
wall, the compound pterotic, bulges dorsally forming
a slight convexity visible externally, with relatively
large fenestrae concentrated ventrally; from all other
Ancistrini except Panaque, Peckoltia,
Parancistrus, Exastilithoxus, Lithoxus,
Leporacanthicus, Megalancistrus,
Pseudacanthicus, and Spectracanthicus
by having dentaries with a relatively short tooth
cup (mean ?=? 10.9% HL, vs. typically greater than
15% HL); and by having and an intermandibular angle
of 90° or less; from Panaque, Peckoltia,
and Parancistrus by having predorsal plates
(excluding nuchal plate) four to five, varying in
size and erratically arranged relative to sagittal
midline (vs. predorsal plates three to four, similar
in size, and bilaterally symmetrical); from Exastilithoxus,
Lithoxus, and Leporacanthicus by
having a longitudinally oval oral disk (vs. round
oral disk); from Leporacanthicus, Megalancistrus,
and Pseudacanthicus by having seven dorsal-fin
rays (vs. eight to 11); from Exastilithoxus
and Leporacanthicus by lacking fimbriate
papillae on oral disk margins; from Exastilithoxus
and Lithoxus by not being strongly dorsoventrally
flattened; from Parancistrus and Spectracanthicus
by having dorsal and adipose fins separate (vs. connected
by a posterior expansion of the dorsal-fin membrane);
from Leporacanthicus by having premaxillary
teeth greater than two per ramus and smaller than
dentary teeth (vs. premaxillary teeth one or two per
ramus and larger than dentary teeth); from Panaque
by lacking plates on the abdomen and by having viliform
teeth (vs. abdomen plated and teeth thickened and
spoon-shaped or elongate and spatulate). Habitat:
Most specimens were collected using rotenone
at shallow rocky reefs in the main channel of the
lower Ventuari River. Water parameters taken at one
site were as follows: temperature 32°C; pH 6.9;
specific conductivity, 12.9 µS/cm; salinity,
0.0 ppt.; dissolved oxygen, 6.6 mg/l or 90.6% saturation.
Thirteen other loricariid species have been collected
syntopically with this species: Ancistrus
macrophthalmus,
Baryancistrus
beggini, B.
demantoides, Hemiancistrus
guahiborum, H.
subviridis, Hypancistrus
contradens, H.
lunaorum, Hypostomus squalinus,
Leporacanthicus
galaxias, Pseudancistrus orinoco,
Pseudolithoxus
anthrax, P.
tigris, and Spatuloricaria
sp. Diet: Intestinal contents of
3 specimens examined were mostly amorphous organic
detritus and inorganic sediment, although gut contents
of one individual included two small snail shells
(Lujan, N.K. and J.W. Armbruster, 2011). Remarks:
Was described as Micracanthicus vandragti in
the 2011 paper but was moved into Hypancistrus
by Lujan et. al. in 2017. Still listed in Fishbase
and some other online resources as M. vandragti,
but as the current status as Hypancistrus vandragti
in Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes.
Common
Name:
L280
Synonyms:
Micracanthicus vandragti
Family:
Loricariidae
Distribution:
Venezuela:
Amazonas State. Known only from the lower Ventuari
River and the Orinoco River near its confluence with
the Ventuari.
Size:
4.5cm. (1¾ins)
Temp:
25-29°c (77-85°f.)
p.H.
6.0-7.5.
Reference:
Froese, R. and D. Pauly.
Editors. 2018. FishBase. World Wide Web electronic
publication. www.fishbase.org, ( 02/2018 ). Lujan, N.K. and J.W.
Armbruster,
2011. Two new genera and species of Ancistrini (Siluriformes:
Loricariidae) from the Western Guiana Shield. Copeia
2011(2):216-225. Lujan, N. K., C. A. Cramer, R. Covain, S.
Fisch-Muller and H. López-Fernández
2017 (5 Jan.) Multilocus molecular phylogeny of the
ornamental wood-eating catfishes (Siluriformes, Loricariidae,
Panaqolus and Panaque) reveals undescribed diversity
and parapatric clades. Molecular Phylogenetics and
Evolution v. 109: [1-37] 321-336.
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