A new question about this fish
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This is captured in Orinico, betwen Puerto Ayacucho and San Fernando Atabapo
Quite possibly. The eye on the first photo looks very large in proportion to the head. It also has a very broad head in proportion to SL, as in the A. macrophthalmus type:Mike_Noren wrote:I'm no expert, but surely that's no Chaetostoma, but an Ancistrus.
Maybe Ancistrus macropthalmus?
Is that explicitly said to be live coloration? Older descriptions often just described the color of the fish in alcohol.The.Dark.One wrote:Mike_Noren wrote:Although the original description has this to say about colour/ pattern (from French): "The overall color is uniformly brown, the underside of the head and belly are white."
Hi MikeMike_Noren wrote: Is that explicitly said to be live coloration? Older descriptions often just described the color of the fish in alcohol.
The spots are pretty small, but I would think they'd be visible if the fish was well preserved. If on the other hand it was two days dead before being put in formalin, or had spent a year in a jar exposed to light before Pellegrin looked at it, or... Well, you get the picture.The.Dark.One wrote:I would have thought that some spotting would have showed up if the background colour had been retained?
Mike_Noren wrote:I'm no expert, but surely that's no Chaetostoma, but an Ancistrus.
Maybe ?
[Mod edit: Use clog-tags --Mats]
You're assuming that the ID in the book is correct. Even the scientists let alone the top hobbyists get things wrong from time to time. We are all human after all!sunfish wrote:A. macrophthalmus ARE spotted (I think there is a picture of a live fish in Ingo Seidel's Catfish Atlas).
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I agree with the point made by sunfish and yourself, in fact I also think it probably is A. macrophthalmus based on locality, body shape/proportions, eye size. But to say A. macrophthalmus "ARE" spotted, I'm not sure I can be so certain.Suckermouth wrote:Sunfish raises a good point. I can't read French, and the description is old enough that it might not even mention it, but if the description is based off of preserved coloration, and this fish was preserved for a long time, or simply preserved poorly, than it could lose its live coloration. Even if properly preserved, very small, light spots typically disappear (apparently melanophores dilate because of preservation). For example, Pseudancistrus nigrescens has many tiny light spots in life, but I have seen over 60 specimens and not one of them shows these spots. Hypancistrus lunaorum also may lose its spots in preservation. A. macrophthalmus looks like it has small enough spots that this could happen.
This is not to say that the pictured fish is definitely A. macrophthalmus, but it seems plausible that a spotted fish such as this might become uniform with a pale belly in preservation.
I think that would be a fairly safe name to go with.This fish will can say A. cf macrophtalmus?