Amaralia
Amaralia is a genus of catfish of the family Aspredinidae native to Amazon and Paraná-Paraguay basin. These species appear to be specialized to feed on the eggs of other catfishes; eggs found in Amaralia stomachs are thought to be those of loricariids.[1]
Amaralia | |
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Subfamily: | Bunocephalinae |
Genus: | Amaralia Fowler, 1954 |
Type species | |
Bunocephalus hypsiurus Kner, 1855 |
Species
There are currently 2 recognized species in this genus:
- Amaralia hypsiura (Kner, 1855)
- Amaralia oviraptor Friel & Carvalho, 2016 [2]
gollark: I mean, why is there just a 3-block solid rim round empty space?
gollark: Why the hole in the middle and not solid floor though?
gollark: I might adopt that thing of running lots of small cable holes round the edges instead of one in the middle.
gollark: Oh, I quite like that design, it's cool.
gollark: If I do make a new one, I might go for some sort of design with modular cubes and connections between them.
References
- Friel, J.P. (1994). "A Phylogenetic Study of the Neotropical Banjo Catfishes (Teleostei: Siluriformes: Aspredinidae)" (PDF). Duke University, Durham, NC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-28. Cite journal requires
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(help) - Friel, J.P. & Carvalho, T.P. (2016): A new species of Amaralia Fowler (Siluriformes: Aspredinidae) from the Paraná-Paraguay River Basin. Zootaxa, 4088 (4): 531–546.
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