Came in as " Shark cat "




Not it, I think. The shape of the caudal fin is too different.retro_gk wrote:The second fish seems to resemble Cetopsorhamdia phantasia, as illustrated in Fishes from the lower Urubamba river (22MB PDF, page 437).
I agree. But my fish seems to match it almost exactly (as referred to by retro gk)?:Silurus wrote:Not it, I think. The shape of the caudal fin is too different.retro_gk wrote:The second fish seems to resemble Cetopsorhamdia phantasia, as illustrated in Fishes from the lower Urubamba river (22MB PDF, page 437).
The current link to this paper (Fishes of the lower Urubamba) is here: https://checklist.pensoft.net/article/18237/list/18/.retro_gk wrote: 27 Mar 2012, 13:58 The second fish seems to resemble Cetopsorhamdia phantasia, as illustrated in Fishes from the lower Urubamba river (22MB PDF, page 437).
Below the drawings from the C. phantasia original description (Stewart, DJ (1985)), the photo of "C. phantasia" taken from the "Fishes from the Lower Urubamba river near Sepahua, Amazon Basin, Peru" paper by Carvalho et al. (2011), and cropped/aligned photos of current "C. phantasia" images 1 and 2 out of the CLOG pages. I think it's likely these are three different species. As for real C. phantasia vs. the other two fish, the first obvious difference is that the color pattern in no way matches, with the CLOG photos showing a body color split between dorsal and ventral surfaces rather than head and body. Secondly, the maxillary barbel is not even close to extending beyond the anal fin base. The Rio Urubamba photo shows a fish that might be solid colored, which in my mind more closely aligns with the recently described . Also, I'm wondering if the fish we have listed as might be C. hidalgoi.Stewar, DJ. (1985) wrote:Coloration (preserved): Snout, lips and chin anterior to mental barbels very dark with what appear to be numerous sensory papillae forming gray speckles on darker background. Similar papillae cover sides and top of head, and back to dorsal-fin origin; papillae scarce or absent over elongate occipital fontanel. Two ovate, light-colored spots on nape bracketing occipital process; thus, contrasting with more typical Cetopsorhamdia condition of light band extending entirely across nape. Belly and underside of head posterior to mental barbels dusky gray, becoming progressively darker posteriorly towards pelvic-fin origin. Mental barbels gray and maxillary barbels darker, approximately matching their corresponding backgrounds. Body anterior to dorsal- and pelvic-fin origins olive-gray, slightly darker towards back. Remainder of body (except caudal peduncle of Rio Aguarico specimens), caudal-fin base, and much of dorsal, adipose, and anal fins very dark, almost black, contrasting sharply with almost unpigmented distal portions of those same fins. Caudal, pectoral, and pelvic fins of holotype relatively clear with two narrow, transverse bands formed by dark chromatophores concentrated on rays; similar submarginal band present on anal fin. Dark pigment on pectoral, pelvic and anal fin of paratype and nontypes more irregular, blotchy.
Coloration (in life): When alive, coloration very much like that of preserved specimens (Fig. 1) with one striking exception-head and body anterior to line between dorsal- and pelvic-fin origins beautiful, irridescent green. Live specimens from depths of turbid Rio Aguarico differ in having head and anterior body metallic gold with a green sheen and similar coloration on entire caudal peduncle, but one Rio Aguarico specimen with dark caudal peduncle like specimens from Rio Jivino.