'''Cetopsidium''' is a
genus of
catfishes (
order Siluriformes) of the
family Cetopsidae. It includes six species, '''C. ferreirai''', '''C. minutum''', '''C. morenoi''', '''C. orientale''', '''C. pemon''', and '''C. roae'''.
[1][2]
Taxonomy
''Cetopsidium'' was described in 2005, its name coming from the ''
Cetopsis'', the first described cetopsid genus, and ''idium'' which means dimunutive, in reference to the relatively small size of ''Cetopsidium'' species. Three existing species were transferred to this genus and three new species were described.
Distribution
''C. ferreirai'' is known only from the
Trombetas River, a left bank tributary of the lower
Amazon River. ''C. minutum'' occurs in the
Potaro River
and middle portion of the
Essequibo River of
Guyana. ''C. morenoi'' is known from the central and western portions of the
Orinoco River basin in
Venezuela and
Colombia. ''C. orientale'' is known from the coastal rivers of
Suriname and
French Guiana in the region from the
Corantijn River along the border between Suriname and Guyana to the
Oyapock-
Oiapoque River along the French Guiana-
Brazil border; it is likely this species is also occurs in the left bank tributaries to the Corantijn River draining from Guyana and the Oiapoque River in Brazil. ''C. pemon'' is known from the
Caroni River and the
Caura River basins, southern tributaries of the Orinoco in eastern Venezuela, the
Meta River basin of the western portions of the Orinoco system in eastern Colombia, and the upper portions of the
Branco River in northern Brazil. ''C. roae'' is only known from the
Rupununi region of southwestern
Guyana.
Description
The combination of the presence of a
dorsal fin with an ossified spinelet and the presence of
pectoral-fin and
dorsal-fin spines distinguishes the species of ''Cetopsidium'' from all other genera in the Cetopsinae. A
lateral line extending to over the posterior portion of the base of the
anal fin but falling short of the
caudal peduncle is also unique in this genus; the lateral line is usually longer than this, though it is shorter in two species of ''
Denticetopsis''. ''Cetopsidium'' species have
mental barbels extending posteriorly beyond the rear margin of the
opercle and a deeply-forked, symmeterical caudal-fin margin with the tips of the lobes slightly blunt or rounded.
The body is elongate to moderately robust; anteriorly the body is not compressed much, but becomes progressively compressed posteriorly. The lateral line is incomplete, unbranched, and midlateral. In most species the dorsal profile is straight, though it may be slightly convex from the head to the dorsal fin origin in some species. The ventral profile is slightly convex at the abdomen but is straight posteriorly. The
caudal peduncle depth is approximately equal to its length in most species, though the depth is less than the length in ''C. roae'' and greater in ''C. orientale''. The eyes are placed on the sides of the head and are visible from above, but not from below. The mouth is subterminal and its width is anywhere between 40–60% of the head length. They have three pairs of barbels, one pair of maxillary barbels and two pairs of mental barbels; the medial mental barbels are slightly shorter than the lateral mental barbels, which are in turn slightly shorter than the slender maxillary barbels. The
anal fin is moderately long, beginning about halfway down the body, with the posterior-most anal fin rays with a slight, membranous attachment to the body. The
pelvic fins are usually small. The first pectoral fin ray is spinous and is slightly longer than one-half the length of the first branched ray; however, the spine may have a prolonged distal filament in mature males.
Sexual dimorphism is observed in ''C. ferreirai'', ''C. morenoi'', ''C. orientale'', and ''C. pemon'', but not in ''C. minutum'' or ''C. roae''. Presumed mature males have the first ray of the dorsal and pectoral fins extended into filaments except in ''C. ferreirai''. Also, the anal fin has a broadly
convex margin rather than a straight margin.
''Cetopsidium'' species are smaller than ''Cetopsis'' species, growing to only 3.7–5.8
centimetres (1.5–2.3
in)
SL.
References
1. The Neotropical whale catfishes (Siluriformes: Cetopsidae: Cetopsinae), a revisionary study, , Richard P., Vari, Neotropical Ichthyology, 2005
2. Checklist of catfishes, recent and fossil (Osteichthyes: Siluriformes), and catalogue of siluriform primary types, , Carl J., Jr., Ferraris, Zootaxa, 2007