Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Evidence for the true type-locality of Rhamdia quelen (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae), and the geographical origin and invalid neotype designation of four of its synonyms

ABSTRACT

Historical information on the probable type-locality of Pimelodus quelen and of its four junior synonyms that share the same neotype, Pimelodus namdia, Pimelodus sebae, Heterobranchus sextentaculatus, and Silurus rivularis, is presented and discussed. The neotype designation for those four species is deemed invalid for not complying with the provisions of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, making it technically possible to revalidate any of the four taxa from the synonymy of Rhamdia quelen without having to address the International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature. The type-locality of both Curimata gilbert and Callichthys asper are also restricted to rio Macacu at the village of Japuíba, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Keywords:
Catfish; Diversity; Nomenclature; Synonymy; Taxonomy

RESUMO

São apresentadas e discutidas informações históricas sobre as prováveis localidades-tipo de Pimelodus quelen e seus quatro sinônimos juniores que compartilham o mesmo neótipo, Pimelodus namdia, Pimelodus sebae, Heterobranchus sextentaculatus e Silurus rivularis. A designação do neótipo para essas quatro espécies é considerada inválida por não estar em conformidade com as disposições do Código Internacional de Nomenclatura Zoológica, tornando tecnicamente possível revalidar qualquer um dos quatro táxons da sinonímia de Rhamdia quelen sem ter que apelar à Comissão Internacional de Nomenclatura Zoológica. As localidades-tipo de Curimata gilbert e Callichthys asper também são restringidas ao rio Macacu na vila de Japuíba, estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.

Palavras-chave:
Bagre; Diversidade; Nomenclatura; Sinonímia; Taxonomia

INTRODUCTION

This is the second paper in a series on the taxonomy of the genus Rhamdia Bleeker, 1858. In the first paper Koerber, Reis (2019Koerber S, Reis RE. The current situation of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) - gather and analyze available information, define a zero point and start all over again. Historia Natural. 2019; 9(2):51-74.) have provided the original descriptions and their respective English translations from either Latin, French, or German along with other relevant writings on Pimelodus quelenQuoy, Gaimard, 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328., Pimelodus namdiaCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2., Pimelodus sebaeCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2., Heterobranchus sextentaculatus Agassiz, in Spix, Agassiz, 1829Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1., and Silurus rivularis Larrañaga, 1923, four of the 47 nominal species of Rhamdia that have been synonymized to R. quelen and which share the same neotype specimen designated by Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.). As it will be demonstrated below, the original type specimens of the above species have been collected in different regions of South America, suggesting that their conspecific status is questionable. A taxonomic revision of Rhamdia is urgently needed in order to solve several issues currently hampering the correct identification of its species in most of the continent. The first step towards this goal is to know the correct type-locality of the nominal species and then try to tackle their geographic distributions.

In the present paper we present and discuss historical information on the locality where the lost type specimens of the above five species have most probably been collected, suggesting that designation of neotypes for any of them should be from the areas identified herein.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

An extensive bibliographic revision on all relevant species descriptions and other literature regarding the collection of the species of Rhamdia has been conducted. All publications for which the original texts and, if not in English, the respective translations have been provided by Koerber, Reis (2019Koerber S, Reis RE. The current situation of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) - gather and analyze available information, define a zero point and start all over again. Historia Natural. 2019; 9(2):51-74.), are indicated by an arrow (↑). All information on validity, synonyms, and type-localities have been taken from Fricke et al. (2019Fricke R, Eschmeyer WN, Van der Laan R. Eschmeyer’s catalog of fishes: genera, species, references [Internet]. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences; 2019. Available from: http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp
http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/re...
). Sherborn, Woodward (1901Sherborn CD, Woodward BB. Notes on the dates of publication of the natural history portions of some French voyages. Part 1. `Amérique méridionale’; `Indes orientales’; `Pôle Sud’ (`Astrolabe’ and `Zélée’); `La Bonite’; `La Coquille’; and `L’Uranie et Physicienne’. Ann Mag Nat Hist. 1901; 7(40):388-92. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930108678490
https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0022293010867...
) provided detailed information on the publication dates of the chapters on zoology of some old French voyagers [pages 1-328 in 1824, 329-616 in 1825, and 617-712 in 1826]. As the formal description of Pimelodus quelen was published on page 228, for the present context Quoy and Gaimard’s work is regarded as published in 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.. This publication has been registered in Zoobank under the code D10EF5B4-473C-4062-B34F-83CC7E8634FA.

RESULTS

Pimelodus quelenQuoy, Gaimard, 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.. In his revision of the genus Rhamdia, Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) wrote “The origin (and type-locality) of Pimelodus quelen Quoy & Gaimard, in Freycinet (1824: 228, Pl. 49 figs 3-4) was stated in the original description as ‘II provient du Brasil…” and “…the original description and the two illustrations are the only sources of information at hand”. The first statement was done referring to the type-locality and the second about the lack of type material. Explicitly referring to page 228 and the two figures on plate 49 is only half of the evidence. Quoy, Gaimard (1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.) provided information on Rhamdia quelen on four pages, twice in the written text and also twice in the section containing the plates. At the end of the volume containing the text, Quoy, Gaimard (1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.) added a table of contents or index to the book in which they mentioned details not included in the main text. On page 701 it reads “Pimélode Quélen, espèce nouvelle de poisson, de la baie de Rio de Janeiro; ses rapports avec le nhamdia, 228, pl. 49, fig. 3”. The second information that remained unmentioned by Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) is found on page 3 of the Atlas, the volume containing the zoological plates. This volume starts with a “Table explicative... des planches dans l’atlas zoologique…”, a legend to the zoological figures, and regarding plate 49, figure 3, the authors state “Pimélode quélen, de la baie de Rio de Janeiro”. Following the two statements of Quoy, Gaimard (1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.), there is no space for doubts that their specimen of Rhamdia quelen was collected while the French ship Uranie anchored in the bay of Rio de Janeiro (currently Guanabara Bay), during a circumnavigational expedition under Louis de Freycinet (1817-1820).

Among the descriptions of other freshwater fishes collected by them in Rio de Janeiro there is information that enables the identification of two possible localities where Rhamdia quelen could have collected along with other specimens described in their work. For Curimata gilbertQuoy, Gaimard, 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328. [currently Cyphocharax gilbert (Quoy, Gaimard 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.)] they provide as locality the “Rio Macacu” (page 219), while for Callichthys asperQuoy, Gaimard, 1824 Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.[currently Callichthys callichthys (Linnaeus, 1758)] the authors describe on page 233 a locality not included in modern maps: “ils proviennent d’un ruisseau qui coule devant la ferme de Santa-Anna, sur le chemin qui conduit de Rio de Janeiro à la colonie Suisse”. Callichthys asper was collected ‘in a brook that flows in front of the farm Santa Anna, on the way that leads from Rio de Janeiro to the Swiss colony’. A map published in 1819 and titled ‘Reconhecimento do Rio de Macacu e da estrada que conduz a Nova Friburgo (colonia suissa)’ (SophiA, 2019SophiA. Map ARC.003,13,005. Reconhecimento do rio de Macacu e da estrada que conduz a Nova Friburgo (Colônia Suissa) [Internet]. Biblioteca Nacional Digital Brasil; 2019. Available from: http://acervo.bndigital.bn.br/sophia/index.asp?codigo_sophia=2688
http://acervo.bndigital.bn.br/sophia/ind...
), not only confirms that Nova Friburgo is the Swiss colony mentioned in the text, and that in those times the way to get there was through the valley of the Rio Macacu, the same river as mentioned for Curimata gilbert, but also shows a locality called St. Anna. In modern maps this locality is the village of Japuíba (22°33’39”S, 42°41’38”W - GoogleEarth). The old map shows a brook ‘B. Japuíba’ that flows into the Rio Macacu just North of ‘St. Anna’. Although the respective type localities ‘Rio Macacu’ and ‘Rio de Janeiro’ (Fricke et al., 2019Fricke R, Eschmeyer WN, Van der Laan R. Eschmeyer’s catalog of fishes: genera, species, references [Internet]. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences; 2019. Available from: http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp
http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/re...
) are not ‘erroneous’ in the sense of recommendation 76A.2 of the Code (ICZN 1999International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICNZ). International code of zoological nomenclature . 4th edition. London: The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature Natural History Museum [internet]. London; 1999. Available from: https://www.iczn.org/the-code/the-international-code-of-zoological-nomenclature
https://www.iczn.org/the-code/the-intern...
), the Rio Macacu at the village of Japuíba, 22°33’40”S 42°41’40”W, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is here restricted as the type-locality of both, Curimata gilbert and Callichthys asper.

Another locality visited during their stay in Rio de Janeiro has been portrayed in the description of Callichthys barbatusQuoy, Gaimard, 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328. [currently Scleromystax barbatus (Quoy, Gaimard, 1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.)] on page 235: “Notre individu habitoit aussi les eaux douces du Brésil, et il fut pris par l’un de nous dans les petits ruisseaux qui arrosent, près de Rio de Janeiro, la ferme de Mandioca, appartenante à M. Langsdorff, consul de Russie”. The authors describe that their specimen lives in Brazilian freshwater and was collected by one of them ‘in the small streams which irrigate, close to Rio de Janeiro, the Mandioca Farm, belonging to Mr. Langsdorff, consul of Russia’. Johann Baptist von Spix and Carl Friedrich von Martius, who joined Johann Natterer in the Austrian expedition to Brazil, have been guests of Georg von Langsdorff in his Mandioca Farm in September 1817, and in the respective part of their travel reports, Spix, Martius (1818Spix JB, Martius CFP. Ueber die Sendung der baier. Akademiker Dr. Spix und Dr. Martius nach Brasilien i.J. 1817. Zweiter Brief aus Brasilien von Rio de Janeiro den 7 Sept 1817. Eos (München). 1818; 1(11):42-43.) provide details on that locality. Langsdorff’s Mandioca Farm was located in Raiz da Serra (Echeverria, 2014Echeverria R. A história da Princesa Isabel: Amor, liberdade e exílio. Rio de Janeiro: Versal Editores; 2014.), a hamlet at the Rio Inhomirim, village of Inhomirim, city of Magé, state of Rio de Janeiro (22°34’34”S 43°11’05”W - GoogleEarth). In addition to the current work on Rhamdia quelen, this represents a refinement of the type-locality of Scleromystax barbatus and probably also for the syntype of Callichthys laeviceps, which Langsdorff himself sent to Valenciennes from Rio de Janeiro.

There is evidence that during their stay in Rio de Janeiro Jean René Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard have collected freshwater fishes in the Rio Macacu at Japuíba and the rio Inhomirim at Raiz da Serra. As they have been very thorough and detailed in the description of their activities, and no further freshwater locality from around Rio de Janeiro has been mentioned, it can be considered that the original collection locality of the missing type specimen of Rhamdia quelen is an affluent of the Guanabara Bay.

During their travel around the world Quoy and Gaimard have been thorough collectors, who brought home thousands of zoological specimens which are still today available at the museum of Paris. Albeit, the type specimens of several species are missing and those seem not to show any pattern in common regarding their taxonomic position or geographical provenance. A possible reason could be that when sailing back from Australia, the Uranie ran on a rock at the Falkland Islands and could not be repaired. Sailors and passengers have been lucky to save their lives and most of what they had collected during the previous years around the globe. Saunders (2012Saunders B. Discovery of Australia’s fishes: A history of Australian ichthyology to 1930. Collingwood: Csiro Publishing; 2012.) informs quite generally that “the wreck at the Falklands resulted in the loss of many specimens, notes and drawings”, while Arago (1823Arago J. Narrative of a voyage around the world. Part 1. London: Treuttel & Wurtz; 1823.), a participant in the expedition, reported more exactly the loss of 18 cases with zoological specimens. It is probable that the missing type specimen of Rhamdia quelen has been lost in those boxes. As Saunders (2012Saunders B. Discovery of Australia’s fishes: A history of Australian ichthyology to 1930. Collingwood: Csiro Publishing; 2012.) also informs about the loss of drawings in the Falklands, it is demonstrated that illustrations have been produced already during the voyage. That would explain why there is an illustration of Rhamdia quelen although the specimen never arrived in Paris.

Neotype designations in terms of the Code.Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) designated NRM 16091 as the neotype for Rhamdia quelen bringing forward the argument that the original type specimen of Quoy, Gaimard (1824Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.) is considered lost. In addition, he designated the same specimen as neotype for Pimelodus namdiaCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2., Pimelodus sebaeCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2., Heterobranchus sextentaculatus Agassiz in Spix, Agassiz, 1829Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1., and Silurus rivularis Larrañaga, 1923, simultaneously making those four taxa objective junior synonyms of Rhamdia quelen. Silfvergrip, however, did not explain why he “considers that a name-bearing type is necessary to define the nominal taxon objectively” (§75.1) for the above four species. Following the spirit of Silfvergrip’s action, this was not the case as he placed the four respective taxa in the synonymy of Rhamdia quelen. In addition, Silfvergrip did not explain the “exceptional need” as required (§75.3) and failed with other conditions of the included sub-clauses and recommendations.

The designation of the same specimen used as neotype for Rhamdia quelen also as neotype for the four synonymous taxa did not add value to define these nominal taxa objectively. Regarding the four synonyms, it is hereby concluded that proposing the same specimen as neotype for a nominal valid taxon and simultaneously for further taxa considered synonyms of the first is an act with “an end in itself” and thus “any such neotype designation is invalid” (§ 75.2). If it was not for the above concluded invalidity of neotype designation for the synonyms, it would be technically impossible to revalidate any of the four taxa from the synonymy with Rhamdia quelen without addressing the Commission to set aside the neotype status of any of the four taxa in question. The above discussed facts and arguments have all been valid already at the moment of Silfvergrip’s act in 1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996., as they have been included in the then valid 3rd edition of the code (ICZN, 1985International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN). International code of zoological nomenclature. 3rd edition. London: The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature Natural History Museum; 1985. ), using different wording and structure of articles, but expressing the same conditions for the valid designation of neotypes.

The present contribution is the second in a series of papers on Rhamdia taxonomy. Since the initial conception of this series it is planned that one of the further contributions will consist in the submission of a formal petition to the International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature to set aside the neotype status of NRM 16091 for Rhamdia quelen. Only after considering the neotype designations for the four synonyms to be invalid and subsequently obtaining the Commission’s agreement to invalidate the current neotype specimen of Rhamdia quelen, it will be possible to choose new neotypes from the below identified areas and thus, ‘start all over again’ in Rhamdia taxonomy (Koerber, Reis, 2019Koerber S, Reis RE. The current situation of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) - gather and analyze available information, define a zero point and start all over again. Historia Natural. 2019; 9(2):51-74.).

Probable collection localities of the four taxa sharing the neotype with Rhamdia quelen. As the neotype designation of NRM 16091 for the four species considered as junior synonyms of Rhamdia quelen is deemed invalid for not complying with the code, the probable type-localities for these taxa are discussed below. If neotypes shall ever be designated for any of those, specimens from the respective area of distribution should be chosen.

Pimelodus namdiaCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2.. The description of Pimelodus namdiaCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2. (↑) is based on the text of Marcgraf (1648Marcgraf G. Rerum naturalium historiae. Liber quartus, qui agit de piscibus brasiliae. 142-181. In: Laet J, editor. Historia Natural is Brasiliae. Leiden & Amsterdam. 1648. ↑), who worked and travelled within the territory of Dutch Brazil, or New Holland, a Dutch colony that existed in Eastern Brazil from 1630 to 1654. The maps left by Georg Marcgraf cover the coastal areas between parallels 5°S and 11°S, showing some 80 km of the hinterland (Klemp, 1993Klemp E. Georg Markgraf als Naturforscher, Landmesser und Kartograph in Brasilien (1638- 1643). Cartographica Helvetica. 1993; 7-8(8):44-46.). This mapped area approximately matches the shoreline of the current Brazilian states of Rio Grande do Norte, Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas, and Sergipe. The rivers of this area drain to the Atlantic Ocean, being the Rio São Francisco the largest, and not to the Amazon basin. There is no information available that Marcgraf could have obtained his specimen of Pimelodus namdia from any place outside the above-mentioned area and it is highly probable that it originated from these coastal systems in Northeastern Brazil. Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) indicated that the vernacular name ‘nhambia’ probably originated from an indigenous language from an area south of the Rio São Francisco mouth but regardless designated a neotype from Loreto in the Peruvian Amazon.

Pimelodus sebaeCuvier, 1829Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2.. Albertus Seba, the person Cuvier’s species is dedicated to, was a Dutch pharmacist living in Amsterdam, who besides his profession was a famous collector of natural history specimens. He gathered an enormous collection of plants, minerals, and animals, which was presented to the public in the volumes of the so-called Thesaurus, of which part 3 was published in 1759 (↑), 23 years after Seba’s death. The fish section was written by Peter Artedi, who had moved to Amsterdam to work on Seba’s fish collection. Artedi, later known as the father of ichthyology, delivered an excellent work, of superior quality than the descriptive texts on all other animals treated in the Thesaurus (Cuvier, 1828Cuvier G, Valenciennes A. Histoire naturelle des Poissons. Paris: Chez F. V. Levrault; 1828. t. 1.).

After selling his first collection to the Russian czar in 1717, Seba build his second collection, on which the Thesaurus was based, until his death in 1736 (Muesch, 2017Muesch I. Albertus Seba’s collection of natural specimens and its pictorial inventory. In: Muesch I, Rust J, Willmann R, editors. Cabinet of Natural Curiosities. Koeln: Taschen-Verlag; 2017. p.6-27.). One source of specimens worth to be included in his collection was to treat ill sailors, sometimes even before they left their ships, in exchange for items those had brought from far away (Engel, 1937Engel H. The life of Albert Seba. Svenska Linnésällskapets Årsskrift:Yearbook of the Swedish Linnaeus Society: 1937.). Also, Seba had established connections with organizations, which sent ships to Amsterdam from abroad, among those the West Indian Company (Engel, 1937Engel H. The life of Albert Seba. Svenska Linnésällskapets Årsskrift:Yearbook of the Swedish Linnaeus Society: 1937.). Seba must have received the specimen of Pimelodus sebae shown in the Thesaurus between 1717 and 1735, the year Artedi died. During this lapse of time, the Dutch colony in Northeastern Brazil had already vanished and the only remaining territory under influence of the Netherlands (and thus from where ships sailed to Amsterdam frequently) and which is a possible area of distribution of Rhamdia, was the Dutch colony of Surinam. Specimens of Rhamdia collected in Surinam, Cayenne in French Guyana, or Demerara in British Guyana have been mentioned by Gronovius (1754Gronovius LT. Museum Ichthyologicum, sistens piscium indigenorum et quorundam exoticorum, qui in Museo Laur. Theod. Gronovii adservantur: descriptiones, ordine systematico; accedunt nonullorum exoticorum piscium icones, aeri incisae. 1754; vol 1. I-viii + 1-70, pls. 1-4. ↑), Valenciennes (1840Valenciennes A. In: Cuvier G, Valenciennes A, editors. Histoire naturelle des poissons. Suite du livre dix-septième. Siluroïdes. Paris: Chez Pitois; Strasbourg: Chez Levrault; 1840. t. 15. ↑), Günther (1864 Günther A. Catalogue of the Physostomi, containing the families Siluridae, Characinidae, Haplochitonidae, Sternoptychidae, Scopelidae, Stomiatidae in the collection of the British Museum. London: Collection of the fishes in the British Museum; 1864.↑), and Boeseman (1972Boeseman M. Notes on South American catfishes, including remarks on Valenciennes and Bleeker types in the Leiden Museum. Zool Meded. 1972; 47(23):293-320. ↑). It cannot be totally excluded that Seba has received his specimen of Rhamdia from another port in the South American Atlantic coast, but an original locality of collection in Surinam or the Guyanas is the most probable option.

Heterobranchus sextentaculatus Agassiz in Spix, Agassiz, 1829. Based on Spix’ travel records Louis Agassiz assigned the following details on the localities of the new species of freshwater fishes described in their work (Spix, Agassiz, 1829 Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1.↑):

  1. 1. habitat in Brasiliae fluviis

  2. habitat in Brasiliae mediae fluviis

  3. habitat in Brasiliae septentrionalis fluviis

  4. habitat in fluviis Brasiliae aequatorialis | habitat in Brasiliae aequatorialis fluviis

  5. habitat in Brasiliae aequatorialis fluviis lacubusque

  6. habitat in Brasiliae aequatoriali

  7. habitat in flumine Amazonum

  8. habitat in flumine S. Francisci | in fluvio Sancti Francisci

  9. habitat in fluvio S. Francisci mediae Brasiliae | in flumine S. Francisci Brasiliae mediae

  10. habitat in Brasiliae aequatorialis fluviis, in flumine Amazonum, Solimoẽns, Rio Negro

  11. habitat in fluviis Japurá et Solimoẽns Brasiliae aequatorialis

  12. habitat in lacu Almada Prov. Bahiensis et in fluvio S. Francisci

  13. habitat in Peruguaçu

  14. habitat in Brasiliae aequinoctialis fluviis

Some of these localities are very detailed while others like ‘in Brazilian rivers’ provide little evidence. Useful information, however, can be obtained about the type-locality of Heterobranchus sextentaculatus. With slightly different wording groups 4, 5, and 6 were joined as equatorial Brazil. The analysis presented by Silva et al. (2016Silva GSC, Melo BF, Oliveira C, Benine RC. Revision of the South American genus Tetragonopterus Cuvier, 1816 (Teleostei: Characidae) with description of four new species. Zootaxa. 2016; 4200(1):1-46. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4200.1.1
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4200....
) is followed in that the species assigned by Agassiz to rivers in equatorial Brazil share a distribution in the Amazon basin. This cluster contains H. sextentaculatus along with 15 additional species listed in Tab. 1.

TABLE 1 |
Species that share the information on the geographical origin as stated in numbers 4, 5, or 6 of Spix, Agassiz (1829Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1.) list (equatorial Brazil). All species previously described by other authors were excluded as the earlier works may have influenced Agassiz’ statements on the respective distribution. Currently valid names from Fricke (2019Fricke R, Eschmeyer WN, Van der Laan R. Eschmeyer’s catalog of fishes: genera, species, references [Internet]. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences; 2019. Available from: http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp
http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/re...
).

There are several clues, however, that allow to narrow the distribution of Agassiz’ species listed in Tab. 1 to the lower Amazon basin in the state of Pará. Pristobrycon aureus (Spix, Agassiz, 1829Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1.) is found in the “lower portion of tributaries of lower Amazon River” and Guyana (Jegú, 2003Jégu M. Subfamily Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). In: Reis RE, Kullander SO, Ferraris CJ, Jr., editors. Check list of the freshwater fishes of South and Central America. Porto Alegre: Edipucrs; 2003. p.182-196.) and Cathorops spixii (Agassiz, 1829) is a marine catfish, which “inhabits mostly estuarine areas, but can occur in lower reaches of rivers as well” (Marceniuk et al., 2012Marceniuk AP, Betancur-R R, Acero-P A, Muriel-Cunha J. Review of the genus Cathorops (Siluriformes: Ariidae) from the Caribbean and Atlantic South America, with description of a new species. Copeia. 2012; 2012(1):77-97. https:/dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-10-202
https:/dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-10-202...
). Also, there is information available that Spix and Martius collected their specimens of Anodus latior [currently Potamorhina latior (Spix, Agassiz, 1829Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1.)] and Pimelodus spixii [currently Cathorops spixii) before reaching to Santarém when travelling up the Amazon (ongoing research on Spix’ freshwater fishes, in prep.) and for fishes collected in the upper part of the Amazon basin they have made a difference by naming e.g., the ‘Solimoẽns’ (see 10. and 11. in the above list).

In many families and genera, the ichthyofauna of the lower Amazon basin is different from that in the Solimões/Marañón basin (e.g., Dagosta, de Pinna, 2017Dagosta FCP, de Pinna M. Biogeography of Amazonian fishes: deconstructing river basins as biogeographic units. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2017; 15(3):e170034. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20170034
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-201...
, 2018Dagosta FCP, de Pinna M. A history of the biogeography of Amazonian fishes. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2018; 16(3):e180023. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20180023
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-201...
, 2019Dagosta FCP, de Pinna M. The fishes of the Amazon: distribution and biogeographical patterns, with a comprehensive list of species. Bull Am Mus Nat Hist. 2019; 431(1):1-163. https://dx.doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090.431.1.1
https://dx.doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090.431...
). Future research will show whether there is a single species of Rhamdia in the Amazon basin or several. In the latter case it must be left to the judgement of future investigators to accept Heterobranchus sextentaculatus as a valid species from the Amazon or the lower portions of its Southern tributaries in the state of Pará or consider it a species inquirenda in the genus Rhamdia.

Nevertheless, there is a high probability that the different portions of the Amazon basin host different species of Rhamdia. Yet unpublished data of Angrizani, Malabarba (2017Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Genetic diversity in Rhamdia quelen Quoy & Gaimard, 1824 (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). In: Birindelli, JLO, org. Abstract Book of II International Symposium on Phylogeny and Classification of Neotropical Fishes. Londrina: Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia; 2017. p.270.) confirm that “the South American clade is divided into three main groups: the Amazon clade, the upper-Amazon clade, and the Brazilian-Shield clade”. The latter could be of importance for the identity of Pimelodus namdia.

Silurus rivularis Larrañaga, 1923.Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) synonymized Silurus rivularis Larrañaga, 1923 with Rhamdia quelen and assigned the neotype NRM 16091 for this species, not including Silurus novemradiatus Larrañaga, 1923(↑), a second species published in the same paper. Devincenzi (1925Devincenzi GJ. El primer ensayo sobre ictiología del Uruguay: La clase “Peces” de la zoología de don Dámaso A. Larrañaga. An Mus Nac Hist Nat Montev. 1925; 6:295-323.) considered both species to be conspecific, listed them in a joined taxon as Silurus rivularis vel 9-radiatus, and proposed a synonymy with Rhamdia quelen. Generally, Dámaso Antonio Larrañaga is considered to have been the first natural scientist of Uruguay and that the species he has mentioned and the specimens his descriptions were based on originated from that country. While the first is beyond doubt, the latter statement must be looked at with caution.

Larrañaga built his personal collection of specimens between 1796 and 1825, the year he became blind (Klappenbach, 2004Klappenbach MA. Larrañaga y el viejo museo. Publ Extra Mus Nac Hist Nat Antropol. 2004; 53:1-32.). During those years, Larrañaga officially lived in the Virreinato del Río de la Plata, while also experienced the colony being occupied by British and Portuguese military forces. Uruguay only obtained independency from the Spanish crown in 1828, three years after Larrañaga stopped collecting. The viceroyalty’s territory included portions of today Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, and South Brazil. Therefore, Larrañagas’ collections did not necessarily originate from within the political limits of present days Uruguay. In a letter dating from 1837 regarding the donation of the “colecciones minerales y zoológicas y todos mis herbarios“ to the museum in Montevideo, Larrañaga confirms that his specimens had been gathered in “nuestra República, en la Provincia de Buenos Aires, del Janeiro, de Santa Catalina etc” (Klappenbach, 2004Klappenbach MA. Larrañaga y el viejo museo. Publ Extra Mus Nac Hist Nat Antropol. 2004; 53:1-32.). This statement made by Larrañaga himself confirms that his specimens may have been collected either in the Río de La Plata or along the coast between Maldonado, Florianópolis, and Rio de Janeiro. This coastal area includes the distribution of the recently described Rhamdia gabrielaeAngrizani, Malabarba, 2018Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3 Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388....
and Rhamdia eurycephalaAngrizani, Malabarba, 2018 Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3 Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388....
and thus, as the whereabouts of Larrañaga’s specimens are unknown and no type is available for examination, the synonymy with Rhamdia quelen as proposed by Devincenzi (1925Devincenzi GJ. El primer ensayo sobre ictiología del Uruguay: La clase “Peces” de la zoología de don Dámaso A. Larrañaga. An Mus Nac Hist Nat Montev. 1925; 6:295-323.) and Silfvergrip (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) is questionable. Larrañaga’s Rhamdia could be conspecific with e.g., Rhamdia sapo (Valenciennes, 1835) from Buenos Aires, if valid, or the ‘Pimelodus sebae’ that Valenciennes (1840 Valenciennes A. In: Cuvier G, Valenciennes A, editors. Histoire naturelle des poissons. Suite du livre dix-septième. Siluroïdes. Paris: Chez Pitois; Strasbourg: Chez Levrault; 1840. t. 15.↑) reported on, collected by Quoy and Gaimard in Montevideo. Hence, in the absence of type specimens, a determination of Larrañaga’s Rhamdia at species level is not possible and both, Silurus rivularis and S. novemradiatus, have to be treated as species inquirendae in the genus Rhamdia.

DISCUSSION

Considering the diversity within Rhamdia and the demonstrated endemism of some of its species to restricted river basins (Garavello, Shibatta, 2016Garavello JC, Shibatta OA. Reappraisal of Rhamdia branneri Haseman, 1911 and R. voulezi Haseman, 1911 (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from the rio Iguaçu with notes on their morphometry and karyotype. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2016; 14(1):e140111. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20140111
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-201...
; Angrizani, Malabarba, 2018Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3 Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388....
), Silfvergrip’s (1996Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.) assignment of a single neotype from the Peruvian Amazon for the five taxa mentioned above is considered inappropriate and does hinder further taxonomic work on the genus Rhamdia. Researchers working on Rhamdia from Central or Trans-Andean America (Perdices et al., 2002Perdices A, Bermingham E, Montilla A, Doadrio I. Evolutionary history of the genus Rhamdia (Teleostei: Pimelodidae) in Central America. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2002; 25(1):172-89. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1055-7903(02)00224-5
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1055-7903(02...
; Hernández et al., 2015Hernández CL, Ortega-Lara A, Sánchez-Garcés GC, Alford MH. Genetic and morphometric evidence for the recognition of several recently synonymized species of Trans-Andean Rhamdia (Pisces: Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Copeia. 2015; 103(3):563-79. https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145 Hernández CL, Ortega-Lara A, Sánchez-Garcés GC, Alford MH. Genetic and morphometric evidence for the recognition of several recently synonymized species of Trans-Andean Rhamdia (Pisces: Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Copeia. 2015; 103(3):563-79. https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145
https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145...
) have already demonstrated their disagreement with Silfvergrip’s extensive synonymizations. Five species have been revalidated, 16 species have been placed into different synonymies, and two new species have been described, R. laluchensis Weber, Allegrucci, Sbordoni, 2003, and R. macuspanensis Weber, Wilkens, 1998, both from southern Mexico. During the same period only two species of South American Rhamdia have been revalidated from the synonymy of R. quelen, R. branneri Haseman, 1911, and R. voulezi Haseman, 1911 (Garavello, Shibatta, 2016Garavello JC, Shibatta OA. Reappraisal of Rhamdia branneri Haseman, 1911 and R. voulezi Haseman, 1911 (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from the rio Iguaçu with notes on their morphometry and karyotype. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2016; 14(1):e140111. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20140111
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-201...
), and four species have been described as new. Rhamdia enfurnadaBichuette, Trajano, 2005Bichuette ME, Trajano E. A new cave species of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from Serra do Ramalho, northeastern Brazil, with notes on ecology and behavior. Neotrop Ichthyol. 2005; 3(4):58-595. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1679-62252005000400016
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1679-6225200...
, was described from a cave in the São Francisco River basin in Bahia, Brazil, R. guasarensis DoNascimiento, Provenzano, Lundberg, 2004 from the Guasare River basin in northwestern Venezuela, and both, R. eurycephala and R. gabrielae, from two small isolated Atlantic drainages in Southern Brazil.

From the species of Rhamdia inhabiting cis-Andean South America, all of which could be conspecific with the type species of the genus, Pimelodus sebae, or Rhamdia quelen, 41 still show the status as left by Silfvergrip (Fricke et al., 2019Fricke R, Eschmeyer WN, Van der Laan R. Eschmeyer’s catalog of fishes: genera, species, references [Internet]. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences; 2019. Available from: http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp
http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/re...
). Recent work on South American Rhamdia (Bichuette, Trajano, 2005Bichuette ME, Trajano E. A new cave species of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from Serra do Ramalho, northeastern Brazil, with notes on ecology and behavior. Neotrop Ichthyol. 2005; 3(4):58-595. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1679-62252005000400016
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1679-6225200...
; Anza, 2006Anza JA. Revisão das espécies do gênero Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) de drenagens costeiras do sul e sudeste do Brasil, um exemplo de diversidade subestimada de gênero. [Master Dissertation]. Porto Alegre: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; 2006.; Garavello, Shibatta, 2016Garavello JC, Shibatta OA. Reappraisal of Rhamdia branneri Haseman, 1911 and R. voulezi Haseman, 1911 (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from the rio Iguaçu with notes on their morphometry and karyotype. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2016; 14(1):e140111. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20140111
https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-201...
; Ríos et al., 2017Ríos N, Bouza C, Gutiérrez V, García G. Species complex delimitation and patterns of population structure at different geographic scales in Neotropical silver catfish ( : Heptapteridae). Environ Biol Fishes. 2017; 100(9):1047-67. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10641-017-0622-1
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10641-017-06...
; Angrizani, Malabarba, 2018Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3 Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388....
) compare different local populations with Rhamdia cf. quelen, Rhamdia aff. quelen, or Rhamdia sp. 1 from somewhere outside the respective focus area of their studies and struggle to reach further conclusions on the actual identity of R. quelen. For an effective restart in Rhamdia taxonomy it will be essential to review the still existing type material of all nominal species assigned to the genus. In addition, the threat of modified local ichthyofaunas by the introduction of allochthonous species of Rhamdia from aquaculture or the bastardization of those with local populations (Ríos et al., 2019Ríos N, Bouza C, García G. Past hybridization and introgression erased traces of mitochondrial lineages evolution in the Neotropical silver catfish Rhamdia quelen (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Hydrobiologia. 2019; 830(1):161-77. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10750-018-3861-z
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10750-018-38...
) becomes nearly prevalent, a strong urgency is advised for these taxonomic studies.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We are grateful to Aléssio Datovo (MZUSP) and Paulo Buckup (MNRJ) for sending specimens on loan. RER is partially funded by the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq process # 306455/2014-5).

REFERENCES

  • Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Genetic diversity in Rhamdia quelen Quoy & Gaimard, 1824 (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). In: Birindelli, JLO, org. Abstract Book of II International Symposium on Phylogeny and Classification of Neotropical Fishes. Londrina: Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia; 2017. p.270.
  • Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3 Angrizani RC, Malabarba LR. Morphology and molecular data reveal the presence of two new species under Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) species complex. Zootaxa. 2018; 4388(1):41-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3
    » http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3» http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4388.1.3
  • Anza JA. Revisão das espécies do gênero Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) de drenagens costeiras do sul e sudeste do Brasil, um exemplo de diversidade subestimada de gênero. [Master Dissertation]. Porto Alegre: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; 2006.
  • Arago J. Narrative of a voyage around the world. Part 1. London: Treuttel & Wurtz; 1823.
  • Bichuette ME, Trajano E. A new cave species of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from Serra do Ramalho, northeastern Brazil, with notes on ecology and behavior. Neotrop Ichthyol. 2005; 3(4):58-595. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1679-62252005000400016
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1679-62252005000400016
  • Boeseman M. Notes on South American catfishes, including remarks on Valenciennes and Bleeker types in the Leiden Museum. Zool Meded. 1972; 47(23):293-320.
  • Cuvier G, Valenciennes A. Histoire naturelle des Poissons. Paris: Chez F. V. Levrault; 1828. t. 1.
  • Cuvier G. Le Règne Animal, distribué d’après son organisation, pour servir de base à l’histoire naturelle des animaux et d’introduction à l’anatomie comparée. Paris: Chez Déterville; Chez Crochard; 1829. t. 2.
  • Dagosta FCP, de Pinna M. Biogeography of Amazonian fishes: deconstructing river basins as biogeographic units. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2017; 15(3):e170034. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20170034
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20170034
  • Dagosta FCP, de Pinna M. A history of the biogeography of Amazonian fishes. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2018; 16(3):e180023. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20180023
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20180023
  • Dagosta FCP, de Pinna M. The fishes of the Amazon: distribution and biogeographical patterns, with a comprehensive list of species. Bull Am Mus Nat Hist. 2019; 431(1):1-163. https://dx.doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090.431.1.1
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090.431.1.1
  • Devincenzi GJ. El primer ensayo sobre ictiología del Uruguay: La clase “Peces” de la zoología de don Dámaso A. Larrañaga. An Mus Nac Hist Nat Montev. 1925; 6:295-323.
  • Echeverria R. A história da Princesa Isabel: Amor, liberdade e exílio. Rio de Janeiro: Versal Editores; 2014.
  • Engel H. The life of Albert Seba. Svenska Linnésällskapets Årsskrift:Yearbook of the Swedish Linnaeus Society: 1937.
  • Fricke R, Eschmeyer WN, Van der Laan R. Eschmeyer’s catalog of fishes: genera, species, references [Internet]. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences; 2019. Available from: http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp
    » http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp
  • Garavello JC, Shibatta OA. Reappraisal of Rhamdia branneri Haseman, 1911 and R. voulezi Haseman, 1911 (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from the rio Iguaçu with notes on their morphometry and karyotype. Neotrop Ichthyol . 2016; 14(1):e140111. https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20140111
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20140111
  • Gronovius LT. Museum Ichthyologicum, sistens piscium indigenorum et quorundam exoticorum, qui in Museo Laur. Theod. Gronovii adservantur: descriptiones, ordine systematico; accedunt nonullorum exoticorum piscium icones, aeri incisae. 1754; vol 1. I-viii + 1-70, pls. 1-4.
  • Günther A. Catalogue of the Physostomi, containing the families Siluridae, Characinidae, Haplochitonidae, Sternoptychidae, Scopelidae, Stomiatidae in the collection of the British Museum. London: Collection of the fishes in the British Museum; 1864.
  • Hernández CL, Ortega-Lara A, Sánchez-Garcés GC, Alford MH. Genetic and morphometric evidence for the recognition of several recently synonymized species of Trans-Andean Rhamdia (Pisces: Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Copeia. 2015; 103(3):563-79. https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145 Hernández CL, Ortega-Lara A, Sánchez-Garcés GC, Alford MH. Genetic and morphometric evidence for the recognition of several recently synonymized species of Trans-Andean Rhamdia (Pisces: Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Copeia. 2015; 103(3):563-79. https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145» https://dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-14-145
  • International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN). International code of zoological nomenclature. 3rd edition. London: The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature Natural History Museum; 1985.
  • International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICNZ). International code of zoological nomenclature . 4th edition. London: The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature Natural History Museum [internet]. London; 1999. Available from: https://www.iczn.org/the-code/the-international-code-of-zoological-nomenclature
    » https://www.iczn.org/the-code/the-international-code-of-zoological-nomenclature
  • Jégu M. Subfamily Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). In: Reis RE, Kullander SO, Ferraris CJ, Jr., editors. Check list of the freshwater fishes of South and Central America. Porto Alegre: Edipucrs; 2003. p.182-196.
  • Klappenbach MA. Larrañaga y el viejo museo. Publ Extra Mus Nac Hist Nat Antropol. 2004; 53:1-32.
  • Klemp E. Georg Markgraf als Naturforscher, Landmesser und Kartograph in Brasilien (1638- 1643). Cartographica Helvetica. 1993; 7-8(8):44-46.
  • Koerber S, Reis RE. The current situation of Rhamdia (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) - gather and analyze available information, define a zero point and start all over again. Historia Natural. 2019; 9(2):51-74.
  • Marceniuk AP, Betancur-R R, Acero-P A, Muriel-Cunha J. Review of the genus Cathorops (Siluriformes: Ariidae) from the Caribbean and Atlantic South America, with description of a new species. Copeia. 2012; 2012(1):77-97. https:/dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-10-202
    » https:/dx.doi.org/10.1643/CI-10-202
  • Marcgraf G. Rerum naturalium historiae. Liber quartus, qui agit de piscibus brasiliae. 142-181. In: Laet J, editor. Historia Natural is Brasiliae. Leiden & Amsterdam. 1648.
  • Muesch I. Albertus Seba’s collection of natural specimens and its pictorial inventory. In: Muesch I, Rust J, Willmann R, editors. Cabinet of Natural Curiosities. Koeln: Taschen-Verlag; 2017. p.6-27.
  • Perdices A, Bermingham E, Montilla A, Doadrio I. Evolutionary history of the genus Rhamdia (Teleostei: Pimelodidae) in Central America. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2002; 25(1):172-89. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1055-7903(02)00224-5
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1055-7903(02)00224-5
  • Quoy JRC, Gaimard JP. Description des Poissons. Chapter IX. In: Freycinet, L, Voyage autour du Monde... exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. “L’Uranie” et “La Physicienne,” pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris; 1824. p.1-328.
  • Ríos N, Bouza C, García G. Past hybridization and introgression erased traces of mitochondrial lineages evolution in the Neotropical silver catfish Rhamdia quelen (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Hydrobiologia. 2019; 830(1):161-77. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10750-018-3861-z
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10750-018-3861-z
  • Ríos N, Bouza C, Gutiérrez V, García G. Species complex delimitation and patterns of population structure at different geographic scales in Neotropical silver catfish ( : Heptapteridae). Environ Biol Fishes. 2017; 100(9):1047-67. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10641-017-0622-1
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10641-017-0622-1
  • Saunders B. Discovery of Australia’s fishes: A history of Australian ichthyology to 1930. Collingwood: Csiro Publishing; 2012.
  • Sherborn CD, Woodward BB. Notes on the dates of publication of the natural history portions of some French voyages. Part 1. `Amérique méridionale’; `Indes orientales’; `Pôle Sud’ (`Astrolabe’ and `Zélée’); `La Bonite’; `La Coquille’; and `L’Uranie et Physicienne’. Ann Mag Nat Hist. 1901; 7(40):388-92. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930108678490
    » https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930108678490
  • Silfvergrip AMC. A systematic revision of the Neotropical catfish genus Rhamdia (Teleostei, Pimelodidae). Stockholm: Swedish Museum of Natural History; 1996.
  • Silva GSC, Melo BF, Oliveira C, Benine RC. Revision of the South American genus Tetragonopterus Cuvier, 1816 (Teleostei: Characidae) with description of four new species. Zootaxa. 2016; 4200(1):1-46. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4200.1.1
    » http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4200.1.1
  • SophiA. Map ARC.003,13,005. Reconhecimento do rio de Macacu e da estrada que conduz a Nova Friburgo (Colônia Suissa) [Internet]. Biblioteca Nacional Digital Brasil; 2019. Available from: http://acervo.bndigital.bn.br/sophia/index.asp?codigo_sophia=2688
    » http://acervo.bndigital.bn.br/sophia/index.asp?codigo_sophia=2688
  • Spix JB, Martius CFP. Ueber die Sendung der baier. Akademiker Dr. Spix und Dr. Martius nach Brasilien i.J. 1817. Zweiter Brief aus Brasilien von Rio de Janeiro den 7 Sept 1817. Eos (München). 1818; 1(11):42-43.
  • Spix JB, Agassiz L. Selecta genera et species piscium quos in itinere per Brasiliam annis MDCCCXVII-MDCCCXX. Monachii: Typis C. Wolf; 1829. pt 1.
  • Valenciennes A. In: Cuvier G, Valenciennes A, editors. Histoire naturelle des poissons. Suite du livre dix-septième. Siluroïdes. Paris: Chez Pitois; Strasbourg: Chez Levrault; 1840. t. 15.

ADDITIONAL NOTES

  • HOW TO CITE THIS ARTICLE

    Koerber S, Reis RE. Evidence for the true type-locality of Rhamdia quelen (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae), and the geographical origin and invalid neotype designation of four of its synonyms. Neotrop Ichthyol. 2020; 18(1):e190117. https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-2019-0117

Edited by

Marcelo Britto

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    17 Apr 2020
  • Date of issue
    2020

History

  • Received
    05 Oct 2019
  • Accepted
    30 Jan 2020
Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia Neotropical Ichthyology, Núcleo de Pesquisas em Limnologia, Ictiologia e Aquicultura, Universidade Estadual de Maringá., Av. Colombo, 5790, 87020-900, Phone number: +55 44-3011-4632 - Maringá - PR - Brazil
E-mail: neoichth@nupelia.uem.br