South American gymnotiform. electric fishes exhibit sexual dimorphism of shape within species, and divergence of shape among species. Recent collecting in floating vegetation mats near Manaus, Brazil, yielded a remarkable association of female and "normal" males of Apteronotus hasemani plus a series of sexually mature male specimens with greatly hypertrophied snouts and gapes. We argue that these fish represent a single species based on shared distinctive features of morphology and coloration, continuous variation of morphometric characters including allometric and dimorphic facial growth in males, ecological and possible reproductive association, and identity in 16S mt rDNA sequences. The degree of dimorphism shown by the large males great...
A new species of Gymnotus Linnaeus is described from Riacho Cambiriba a clear water stream, tributar...
Here we document sexual dimorphism in both external measurements of the head and discrete features o...
ABSTRACT Sexual dimorfism refers to morphological differences between males and females of a species...
South American gymnotiform electric fishes exhibit sexual dimorphism of shape within species, and di...
Sexual dimorphism of the snout has evolved independently in at least four separate clades of the gym...
A new species of the neotropical electric fish genus Compsaraia is described from the western Amazon...
Anew species of the neotropical electric fish genus Compsaraia is described from the western Amazon ...
Apteronotus acidops, new species, is described from the upper Paraná River basin, Brazil. It can be ...
The electric fish genus Platyurosternarchus, family Apteronotidae, is reviewed based on both externa...
"Apteronotus" bonapartii (Castelnau 1855) was described based on a single specimen caught in a lake ...
Gymnotus chimarrao, new species, is described from Arroio Grande, an affluent of the Rio Taquari, in...
Pariosternarchus amazonensis, new genus and species, is described from the Amazon river of Brazil an...
Recent study of the type-material of Tembeassu marauna, a poorly-known species currently represented...
A new species of Gymnotus, from the G. pantherinus species-group, is herein described from the rio J...
Gymnotus chimarrao, new species, is described from Arroio Grande, an affluent of the Rio Taquari, in...
A new species of Gymnotus Linnaeus is described from Riacho Cambiriba a clear water stream, tributar...
Here we document sexual dimorphism in both external measurements of the head and discrete features o...
ABSTRACT Sexual dimorfism refers to morphological differences between males and females of a species...
South American gymnotiform electric fishes exhibit sexual dimorphism of shape within species, and di...
Sexual dimorphism of the snout has evolved independently in at least four separate clades of the gym...
A new species of the neotropical electric fish genus Compsaraia is described from the western Amazon...
Anew species of the neotropical electric fish genus Compsaraia is described from the western Amazon ...
Apteronotus acidops, new species, is described from the upper Paraná River basin, Brazil. It can be ...
The electric fish genus Platyurosternarchus, family Apteronotidae, is reviewed based on both externa...
"Apteronotus" bonapartii (Castelnau 1855) was described based on a single specimen caught in a lake ...
Gymnotus chimarrao, new species, is described from Arroio Grande, an affluent of the Rio Taquari, in...
Pariosternarchus amazonensis, new genus and species, is described from the Amazon river of Brazil an...
Recent study of the type-material of Tembeassu marauna, a poorly-known species currently represented...
A new species of Gymnotus, from the G. pantherinus species-group, is herein described from the rio J...
Gymnotus chimarrao, new species, is described from Arroio Grande, an affluent of the Rio Taquari, in...
A new species of Gymnotus Linnaeus is described from Riacho Cambiriba a clear water stream, tributar...
Here we document sexual dimorphism in both external measurements of the head and discrete features o...
ABSTRACT Sexual dimorfism refers to morphological differences between males and females of a species...