Nannostomus anduzei is restricted to the Amazonian region of the South American continent, and has only been formally reported from two localities in the north of that area. The first, and site of discovery, was north of the small Venezuelan town of
Puerto Ayacucho in a small lagoon, in the upper regions of the Rio Orinoco, at 5° 50' N, 67° 30' W. The second site was some to the southeast, in the
Lago Caatinga, off the Rio Ererê, a tributary of the Rio Negro at 0° 14' S; 63° 53' W. These limited data are reflected in the range map above, where it is not possible to say where else the species might be found. However, because these fish occasionally do appear in the aquarium trade (see also
below), their true range likely is somewhat wider than indicated. While the two known sites are geographically widely separated in two river systems, the Orinoco and the Negro are linked by the
Casiquiare canal, so migration between the two sites is possible.
N. anduzei does not appear in a systematic list of fishes of Columbia, though the northern Orinoco locality is only a few kilometres from the Colombian border. This could represent undersampling in what is a remote part of the forest. ==Description==