Andean catfish

The Andean catfish (Astroblepus ubidiai) is a species of freshwater fish in the Astroblepidae family. It is endemic to the highlands of the Ecuadorian Andes.

The Spanish name for the Andean catfish is  preñadilla.

The Andean catfish's natural habitats are the mountainous rivers, freshwater springs or aquifers, caves and inland karsts of four different drainage basins within the Imbakucha watershed. It is brownish gray in colour and has no scales; large adults can grow up to 150 mm. Like all other catfishes, it has barbels around the mouth which contain taste buds that help the animal find food at night. Its diet consists of other fish, frogs, snails, algae, and other aquatic organisms.

The species is critically endangered by habitat loss, pollution, and fishing. Habitat loss has fragmented its population; natural and anthropogenic barriers, such as pasture grounds, fields, human settlements, and the presence of predators such as piscivorous large mouth bass in Imbakucha Lake have resulted in the segregation of its six subpopulations and limit their probabilities of escape to other refugia when the environment deteriorates.