We report
on a new species of the genus Ituglanis Costa
& Bockmann, 1993 which is the first Trichomycteridae
from the Parnaíba River basin. Specimens of
the taxon have been collected by one of us (WS) many
years ago and their existence has been previously
recorded in Ramos, (2012) and Ramos et al., (2014),
but they have not been the object of detailed taxonomic
analysis. Ituglanis is a species-rich genus
of the Trichomycteridae, with 30 valid species (11
of which described in the last ten years) (Fricke
et al., 2023). Its taxonomy is increasingly complex
and the majority of species are diagnosed by combinations
of characters. The new species is noteworthy mostly
because of its biogeographic significance. It shows
that trichomycterids are actually present in the Parnaíba
basin, although their diversity there remains oddly
low for a basin of that size and with relationships
with the trichomycterid-rich Amazonian ichthyofaunistic
(Donin
LM. et al 2023). Habitat:
Itugalnis crispim is known so far from a
single site in the riacho da Volta, right tributary
to Parnaíba River, Parnaíba River basin
(Donin
LM. et al 2023).
Aquarium Care: Even although this species
is termed, along with other members of this family,
as parasitic catfishes it is well behaved in the aquarium
but is seldom seen until feeding time. Provide caves/pipes
for this species. Etymology. The
specific epithet was given in reference to the Crispim,
known for the local tragedy-legend “Cabeça
de Cuia”. Having murdered his own mother, Crispin
was cursed and turned into a horrific aquatic creature
with a gigantic “cuia” (bowl-shaped) head,
condemned to perpetually wander the Parnaíba
River and only to be redeemed after devouring seven
virgins named Maria. A noun in apposittion.
Common
Name:
None
Synonyms:
None
Family:
Trichomycteridae
Distribution:
South America:
Riacho da Volta, right tributary to Parnaíba
River, Parnaíba River basin, Brazil.
Size:
3.5cm.
(1½ins)
Temp:
25-28°c (77-83°f.)
p.H.
6.0-7.0.
Reference:
Donin LM, Pinna MCC,
Severi W, Ramos TPA. Filling in a biogeographic
gap: the first Trichomycteridae from the Parnaíba
River basin (Siluriformes: Trichomycteridae). Neotrop
Ichthyol. 2023; 21(2):e230018
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