Habitat: Inhabits
rivers with sandy to muddy bottom. Diet:
Found to exhibit parasitic traits. Forages both during
the day and at night seeks the gill chambers of larger
fishes, especially catfishes. Enters and leaves the
gill chamber during the host's ventilating movements:
feeds on blood drawn from the gill filaments and may
stay in the gill chamber for 1-3 min; when gorged
with blood, moves to the bottom and buries itself
in the sand. A single large catfish tethered on the
river bank may feed thousand of these parasitic catfish
over a period of up to 6 hours. Large numbers of this
fish may kill fishes tethered by fishermen. Sexual
Differences: Two females, 1.8 cm TL, caught
in January (wet season) had about 150 mature oocytes
each, and one male 2.0 cm TL had well-developed testes.
Etymology: The genus name of Paravandellia:
para-, near, i.e., considered
between Stegophilus and Vandellia
(yet described as having the general appearance of
the former). The specific name of oxyptera:
oxy, sharp; ptera, fin, presumably referring to the
large, falcate pectoral fins.
South America:Paraná, Paraguay and Uruguay River
basins (Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Paraguay and Uruguay).
Type locality: Caceres, margens do
Rio Paraguay [Brazil].
Paravandellia
oxyptera On the gills of Pseudoplatystoma corruscans
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