Loricarioidei
Loricarioidei is a suborder of catfishes. It contains the six families Trichomycteridae, Nematogenyiidae, Callichthyidae, Scoloplacidae, Astroblepidae, and Loricariidae. Some schemes also include Amphiliidae. This superfamily, including Amphiliidae, includes about 156 genera and 1,187 species.
Taxonomy
Loricarioidea was previously considered a part of Siluroidei, a clade of all catfishes excluding Diplomystidae. In Nelson, 2006, this grouping is sister to the superfamily Sisoroidea. However, in a recent molecular analysis, it was determined that the suborder Loricarioidei is sister to a group including Diplomystidae and Siluroidei. Amphiliidae, in this analysis, was found to be much more closely related to Mochokidae or Malapteruridae. It is disputed whether Loricarioidea or Diplomystidae are the most basal group of catfish, with molecular studies favoring the former while morphological studies favor the latter.The earliest known definitive loricaroid is the callichthyid Corydoras revelatus from the Late Paleocene of Argentina. Molecular estimates suggest that the main radiation of the superfamily occurred during the Late Cretaceous. The putative Cenomanian member Afrocascudo, discovered from the Cenomanian age of the Late Cretaceous in North Africa, was initially described as the earliest loricariid catfish in 2024, which may extend the fossil record of Loricariidae. However, this taxon might represent a juvenile obaichthyid lepisosteiform, possibly a junior synonym of Obaichthys, though this has been disputed based on the complete ossification of the bones indicating full maturity and the absence of important holostean characters.
Loricarioidea is currently diagnosed by the derived presence of a reduced gas bladder, encapsulated in expansions of the parapophysis of the first vertebrae, and of odontodes, small dermal denticles. Amphiliidae is the most basal group in Loricarioidea. In some older sources, Amphiliidae is not even included in this classification. Based on morphologically evidence, Trichomycteridae and Nematogenyiidae diverge first; these two families are probably sister groups. This relationship was neither supported nor rejected by molecular evidence. Next, the order of divergence is probably Callichthyidae, then Scoloplacidae, and then Astroblepidae and Loricariidae. A trend in increasingly complex jaw morphology can be seen in this superfamily, which may have allowed for the great diversification of the Loricariidae, which have the most advanced jaws.
Families and subfamilies
Loricarioidei contains the following families and subfamilies:- Family Nematogenyidae Bleeker, 1862
- Family Trichomycteridae Bleeker, 1858
- * Subfamily Copionodontinae de Pinna, 1992
- * Subfamily Trichogeninae Isbrücker, 1986
- * Subfamily Trichomycterinae Bleeker, 1858
- * Subfamily Sarcoglanidinae Myers & Weitzman, 1966
- * Subfamily Glanapteryginae Myers, 1944
- * Subfamily Potamoglanidinae V. J. C. Reis, Lecointre & de Pinna, 2025
- * Subfamily Tridentinae C. H. Eigenmann, 1918
- * Subfamily Stegophilinae Günther, 1864
- * Subfamily Vandelliinae Bleeker, 1862
- Family Callichthyidae Bonaparte, 1835
- * Subfamily Callichthyinae Bonaparte, 1835
- * Subfamily Corydoradinae Hoedeman, 1952
- Family Scoloplacidae Bailey & Baskin, 1976
- Family Astroblepidae Bleeker, 1862
- Family Loricariidae Rafinesque, 1815
- * Subfamily Lithogeninae Gosline, 1947
- * Subfamily Delturinae R. E. Reis, E. H. L. Pereira & Armbruster, 2006
- * Subfamily Rhinelepinae Armbruster, 2004
- * Subfamily Loricariinae Rafinesque, 1815
- * Subfamily Hypoptopomatinae C. H. Eigenmann & R. S. Eigenmann 1890
- * Subfamily Hypostominae Kner, 1853
Distribution and habitat