Brycon costaricensis

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Brycon costaricensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Characiformes
Family: Bryconidae
Genus: Brycon
Species:
B. costaricensis
Binomial name
Brycon costaricensis

Brycon costaricenisis, the Costa Rican brycon or machaca, is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the family Bryconidae, the doradas and jaw characins. This species is found in Central America.

Brycon costaricenisis was first formally described in 2013 by the Costa Rican ichthyologist Arturo Angulo and the Mexican ichthyologist Jatziry Marlene Gracian-Negrete, with its type locality given as "Atlantic slope, Heredia, Sarapiquí drainage, La Virgen de Sarapiquí, Río Sarapiquí, at the Tirimbina Biological Reserve, 10°24'56.84"N, 84°07'18.70"W, Costa Rica, altitude 149 meters".[2] This taxon had previously been considered to be a disjunct population of B. guatemalensis, but was shown to have distinct morphometrics and meristics. This species is classified B. striatulus species group within the genus Brycon,[3] which is classified within the subfamily Bryconinae of the family Bryconidae[4] in the suborder Characoidei of the order Characiformes.[5]

Etymology

Brycon costaricenisis belongs to the genus Brycon. This name is derived from the Greek brýchō (βρύχω), which means "to bite", "gnash teeth" or "eat greedily", thought to be an allusion to the fully toothed maxillae of the type species, B. falcatus. The specific name refers to Costa Rica, where the type locality is.[6]

Description

Distribution and habitat

References

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