Synodontis Omias?

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polkadot
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Synodontis Omias?

Post by polkadot »

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Are these Synodontis Omias? They're around 8" and quite aggressive towards one another. How do I sex them? The previous owner claim that he kept them for 5 years to reach this size! Do they grow that slow? :shock:
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Silurus
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Post by Silurus »

Do you have a close-up photo of the humeral process (the bone on the side of the body just behind the head)? From what I can see, it doesn't look like <i>S. omias</i>.
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Post by Dinyar »

Actually, you can see the humeral of the front-most fish quite clearly. However, I have no knowledge of Synodontis omias, so cannot comment beyond saying that experience suggests that many of these claims of exotic species IDs turn out to be unfounded.

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Post by SynoPetri »

I agree with Dinyar, but in this case I would say the fish look a bit like S. macrops.
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Post by Dinyar »

Silurus claims that our pix of S. macrops in the Catalog are really S. frontosus, which is highly plausible, but as I have never seen a picture of frontosus, I haven't been able to convince myself 100%. We've had our "frontosus" for four years, and it does not seem to have grown beyond 11 cm, which is much smaller than the 30+ cm length Fishbase reports.

Anyway, I doubt the pictured fish is S. macrops/frontosus, as the humeral process looks different. Here is a photo of the humeral on our fish...

Dinyar

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Post by Silurus »

I am almost certain that is not <i>S. omias</i>, since <i>S. omias</i> is one of those species with an ornamented humeral process.
I will consult my syno bible (Poll) when I return to the US and see...
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Post by polkadot »

Will try to take another closeup shot...Thanks
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Post by polkadot »

Here's a closeup shot.

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Post by Silurus »

That's definitely not <i>S. omias</i>. I'll have an answer to its exact identity in 72 hours..
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Post by Silurus »

The closest I can get to is <i>S. obesus</i>, but I cannot rule out the possibility that these are very large <i>S. nigrita</i>. Has anyone seen full-grown <i>S. nigrita</i> (at or near maximum size) to disprove me?
Last edited by Silurus on 05 Jul 2003, 04:27, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Dinyar »

S. nigrita was also my first thought. I've seen some pretty large ones. But then there are lots of non-descript Syno species that look vaguely similar, so I hesitate to proclaim "S. nigrita" with conviction.

Dinyar
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