2019
DOI: 10.1590/1982-0224-20180114
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Abstract: A new species of Farlowella is described from the Bermejo River basin, in Salta and Jujuy provinces, northwestern Argentina. The new species belongs to the Farlowella nattereri species group. The new species is diagnosed by the following combination of characters: marbled rostrum, five rows of lateral plates series, relatively short snout (snout-mouth length less than 50.0% of head length), complete half-moon shaped spot on caudal fin, and short predorsal distance (37.8-41.8% of standard length).

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Cited by 837 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…These groups were proposed based mainly on the presence and number of vertical rows of lateral plates (counted from predorsal to lateral abdominal plates), number of rows of abdominal plates, degree of development of odontodes on the snout, and length and breadth of the snout. Subsequent to this study, descriptions of new species [99][100][101][102][103], followed the groups and characters outlined by Retzer and Page [81]. Nevertheless, five of those six species groups were not recovered as monophyletic (except for the Farlowella acus group) and the characters proposed to diagnose them are not phylogenetically informative.…”
Section: Monophyly Of Farlowellamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These groups were proposed based mainly on the presence and number of vertical rows of lateral plates (counted from predorsal to lateral abdominal plates), number of rows of abdominal plates, degree of development of odontodes on the snout, and length and breadth of the snout. Subsequent to this study, descriptions of new species [99][100][101][102][103], followed the groups and characters outlined by Retzer and Page [81]. Nevertheless, five of those six species groups were not recovered as monophyletic (except for the Farlowella acus group) and the characters proposed to diagnose them are not phylogenetically informative.…”
Section: Monophyly Of Farlowellamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the past few years, several collecting trips have been made to the upper Bermejo basin in north‐western Argentina, revealing the presence of at least 15 previously unrecorded or new species, such as Andromakhe latens (Mirande et al ., 2004), Hypostomus boulengeri (Eigenmann & Kennedy 1903) (in Alonso et al ., 2016; Cardoso et al ., 2016), Hypostomus cochliodon Kner 1854 (in Cardoso et al ., 2012; Terán et al ., 2016), H. uruguayensis Reis, Weber & Malabarba 1990 (in Lustosa‐Costa et al ., 2021), Farlowella azpelicuetae Terán et al ., 2019, and Jenynsia sulfurica Aguilera et al ., 2019, among others. Additionally, during these expeditions some specimens of Imparfinis were collected which were not assignable to either of the two species previously recorded for Argentina, and which present several morphological and meristic characteristics that relate them instead to Imparfinis guttatus (Pearson, 1924).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In tripodfishes, the extremely long caudal fin ventral PPRs that match pelvic fin ray length enable a posture parallel to the substrate 53 . Altered POC modules may also drive the remarkable extension of the peripheral‐most principal caudal fin rays of some whiptail catfishes (Loricariinae) 54‐57 . Co‐characterizing caudal fin ray ontogeny, morphologies, and muscle attachments in these groups would help elucidate if and how changes to vPOC/vPPR modules cause caudal fin symmetry‐breaking and ray elongation phenotypes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%