What do you think?
What do you think?
Do you think that this fish:-
http://www.planetcatfish.com/catelog/im ... ge_id=7390
And this fish:-
http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm ... raphic.com
Are the same fish?[/list]
http://www.planetcatfish.com/catelog/im ... ge_id=7390
And this fish:-
http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm ... raphic.com
Are the same fish?[/list]
I'm new to all this.
- racoll
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Hi AquaKat.
Although they look very similar, (most Hypostomus do unfortunately), I would be very surprised if they are the same species.
Hypostomus commersoni is found in the Paraná, La Plata and Uruguay River basins in the far south of Brazil as well as Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina.
The expedition on the National Geographic article was in the Essequibo River in Guyana (at the far north of Latin America).
As the two locations are about 2500 miles apart, and there are lots of Hypostomus in between the two locations, its pretty unlikey.
Here is a map roughly showing the two locations.....
Number one is the fish in the article and number two is Hypostomus commersoni.
I hope this answers your question.
.
Although they look very similar, (most Hypostomus do unfortunately), I would be very surprised if they are the same species.
Hypostomus commersoni is found in the Paraná, La Plata and Uruguay River basins in the far south of Brazil as well as Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina.
The expedition on the National Geographic article was in the Essequibo River in Guyana (at the far north of Latin America).
As the two locations are about 2500 miles apart, and there are lots of Hypostomus in between the two locations, its pretty unlikey.
Here is a map roughly showing the two locations.....
Number one is the fish in the article and number two is Hypostomus commersoni.
I hope this answers your question.
.
- racoll
- Posts: 5258
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- Location 1: London
- Location 2: UK
- racoll
- Posts: 5258
- Joined: 26 Jan 2004, 12:18
- My articles: 6
- My images: 182
- My catfish: 2
- My cats species list: 2 (i:2, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 1 (i:0)
- Spotted: 238
- Location 1: London
- Location 2: UK
I would say that the fish in the picture is Hypostomus macushi.
It looks like one the scientists (Jon Armbruster) described this fish on that trip, and it looks very similar indeed.
Check these two references from fish base and the Armbruster website......
http://www.fishbase.org/Country/Country ... es=macushi
http://www.auburn.edu/academic/science_ ... hypos.html
The bad news is that you have an almost 0% chance of getting hold of one.
Maybe you could order one from a specialist retailer who has a Guyanan importer.
It looks like one the scientists (Jon Armbruster) described this fish on that trip, and it looks very similar indeed.
Check these two references from fish base and the Armbruster website......
http://www.fishbase.org/Country/Country ... es=macushi
http://www.auburn.edu/academic/science_ ... hypos.html
The bad news is that you have an almost 0% chance of getting hold of one.
Maybe you could order one from a specialist retailer who has a Guyanan importer.
- Yann
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