Bryconops melanurus
Bryconops melanurus, sometimes called the tail-light tetra, is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the family Iguanodectidae. This species is found in South America. It lives in small schools and is an active swimmer, which means that it requires open space in its habitat, primarily preying on insects. Nonetheless, it does not demonstrate a strong preference for any one biotope within its native range.
Description
Bryconops melanurus reaches a maximum total length of about 13.2 cm, which puts it on the larger side of the genus Bryconops. The head is slender, with a pointed snout, and B. melanurus lacks a humeral spot of the kind frequently seen in congeners. B. melanurus shares aspects of its jaw structure, which is rather lengthened, with B. inpai, B. affinis, and B. giacopinii.Bryconops melanurus is a silvery, slender fish with a darker back. The caudal fin has distinctive markings, but lacks a well-formed ocellus. There is a dark stripe about the width of the pupil that veers from the center of this fin up towards the dorsal lobe, and the caudal-fin margins are dusky. The rest of the fin is either light in pigment or entirely clear.
Bryconops melanurus has noted morphological similarities with congeners B. transitoria and B. gracilis, but can be differentiated based on morphometric specifics and differences in fin structure; for instance, B. transitoria has 23-27 anal-fin rays, whereas B. melanurus has 28–29. B. melanurus is also known to be similar to B. cytogaster, but cyrtogaster has a deeper body and a greater number of anal-fin rays.
While it lacks a common name accepted by the wider scientific community, hobbyists know it as the tail-light tetra. It should not be confused with the head-and-tail light tetra, Hemigrammus ocellifer, which is a different fish in the same order, Characiformes.
Taxonomy
Bryconops melanurus, when originally described by German naturalist Marcus Elieser Bloch in 1794, was named Salmo melanurus, and was listed as a salmon native to Suriname.By 1926, it had been moved to the genus Creatochanes, which is reflected in a paper by English ichthyologist John Roxborough Norman. Creatochanes is no longer considered a standalone genus, and is instead a subgenus of Bryconops to which B. melanurus belongs.
DNA barcoding has revealed that B. melanurus is most closely related to B. transitoria and, slightly more distantly, B. caudoma\culatus.