A few from Iquitos to ID
- tjudy
- Posts: 102
- Joined: 10 Sep 2004, 21:38
- My cats species list: 13 (i:0, k:0)
- My BLogs: 2 (i:0, p:115)
- Spotted: 24
- Location 1: Stoughton, Wisconsin
- Interests: aquariums
- Contact:
A few from Iquitos to ID
The 'royal laoricaria' flavor of the week....
Four different woodcats
A
B
C... pretty sure I know what this one is.
D
Four different woodcats
A
B
C... pretty sure I know what this one is.
D
-
- Posts: 109
- Joined: 07 Mar 2012, 07:02
- My images: 14
- Spotted: 5
- Location 1: http://amazontropics.com
- Location 2: Columbus OH USA
- Interests: All catfish
- Contact:
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
The Loricarrid is probably a form of Loricaria simillima.
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Woodcats:
A: or a yet undescribed Spinipterus
B: a member of the Tatia intermedia complex
C: I'd say but it could also be
D:
Second thoughts wrt C, given the large spots, I think it is Tatia galaxias.
A: or a yet undescribed Spinipterus
B: a member of the Tatia intermedia complex
C: I'd say but it could also be
D:
Second thoughts wrt C, given the large spots, I think it is Tatia galaxias.
- tjudy
- Posts: 102
- Joined: 10 Sep 2004, 21:38
- My cats species list: 13 (i:0, k:0)
- My BLogs: 2 (i:0, p:115)
- Spotted: 24
- Location 1: Stoughton, Wisconsin
- Interests: aquariums
- Contact:
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Doubtful that D is T. gyrina... these fish came from Peru, and the PlanetCatfish profile described distribution as being Suriname....?
T. galaxias also appears to come from much further north and east.
T. galaxias also appears to come from much further north and east.
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
In that case the PC description is incomplete (see link below).tjudy wrote:Doubtful that D is T. gyrina... these fish came from Peru, and the PlanetCatfish profile described distribution as being Suriname....?
T. galaxias also appears to come from much further north and east.
Anyway, it amazes me that people (in general!) start reading when just looking closely would be more than sufficient. One can see that this is T. gyrina by just comparing your picture with the ones in the Clog.
http://www.fishbase.org/Summary/Species ... ng=english
The same goes for T. galaxias imo.
http://www.fishbase.org/summary/Tatia-galaxias.html
I believe that many fishes - unable to read and not restricted by boundaries - have a much larger distribution area than we know or pretend to know.
However, I don't think my view is the general view. I'm a lumper, not a splitter.
I tried to help you out wrt your questions on ID's and this is what I think. If you still have doubts, I'm sorry but there's little I can do about it. Perhaps someone else has better ideas?
Btw: I'd like to state that - although keeping these fishes for an odd 25 years - I still have plenty of things to learn myself. I certainly don't have all answers and I'm aware of that.
-
- Posts: 606
- Joined: 26 May 2007, 22:35
- My images: 30
- Spotted: 20
- Location 1: Ludwigsburg - Germany
- Location 2: Ludwigsburg - Germany
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Hi,
wrt. Tatia gyrina, I also think that information at PCF is incomplete.
Acc. to Ferraris checklist and others the type locality of this species is close to Iquitos / Rio Itaya.
I think the the "Tatia gyrina" from Suriname have been described as Tatia creutzbergi and considered by some to be a synonym to Tatia gyrina.
We caught some in Suriname this year but I don't have any pics as my friends took these.
Cheers,
wrt. Tatia gyrina, I also think that information at PCF is incomplete.
Acc. to Ferraris checklist and others the type locality of this species is close to Iquitos / Rio Itaya.
I think the the "Tatia gyrina" from Suriname have been described as Tatia creutzbergi and considered by some to be a synonym to Tatia gyrina.
We caught some in Suriname this year but I don't have any pics as my friends took these.
Cheers,
--
Karsten
Karsten
- tjudy
- Posts: 102
- Joined: 10 Sep 2004, 21:38
- My cats species list: 13 (i:0, k:0)
- My BLogs: 2 (i:0, p:115)
- Spotted: 24
- Location 1: Stoughton, Wisconsin
- Interests: aquariums
- Contact:
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Thank you....
Marc... with all due respect... I am fully aware that fish cannot read, and that most of us are 'arm chair ichthyologists' having some fun with fish that we get sporadic access to. Range data on many fish in the world is woefully incomplete. I have personally collected fish species a long way out of their published ranges. I am not questioning your knowledge, but I do question anyone who claims that they can make positive identification from a single digital photograph, especially in this era of splitting species using factors that cannot be observed by the naked eye. The fish may indeed be what you say that they are, and I appreciate the help. The purpose of posting images on hobby forums is to benefit from our collective knowledge.
Marc... with all due respect... I am fully aware that fish cannot read, and that most of us are 'arm chair ichthyologists' having some fun with fish that we get sporadic access to. Range data on many fish in the world is woefully incomplete. I have personally collected fish species a long way out of their published ranges. I am not questioning your knowledge, but I do question anyone who claims that they can make positive identification from a single digital photograph, especially in this era of splitting species using factors that cannot be observed by the naked eye. The fish may indeed be what you say that they are, and I appreciate the help. The purpose of posting images on hobby forums is to benefit from our collective knowledge.
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Thanks for you appreciating my help, for that's just what it is: help. Like yourself I'm just an amateur having fun with my fishes. Therefore I can't (and won't) possibly look down on anyone or be arrogant. Why should I? If I have given you that impression, I'm sorry for that.tjudy wrote:Marc... with all due respect... I am fully aware that fish cannot read, and that most of us are 'arm chair ichthyologists' having some fun with fish that we get sporadic access to. Range data on many fish in the world is woefully incomplete. I have personally collected fish species a long way out of their published ranges. I am not questioning your knowledge, but I do question anyone who claims that they can make positive identification from a single digital photograph, especially in this era of splitting species using factors that cannot be observed by the naked eye. The fish may indeed be what you say that they are, and I appreciate the help. The purpose of posting images on hobby forums is to benefit from our collective knowledge.
I also hope you noticed me talking in general in my previous post. The line "fish can't read" is used by me to make clear that lots of media contain lots of incorrect information. I used it here to state that fish will not be restricted to area X simply because someone wrote that he found them in area X.
Wrt the quote in bold: based on your reasoning, it would mean that no-one can make a correct ID based on a single picture (or even multiple pictures).
Again, I ID-ed your fishes based on my "knowledge" of keeping auchenipterids for a while, having read a bit and having seen loads of pictures. That's all. As stated in my last line, I have no pretence of knowing everything. Far from it actually. I wouldn't mind if someone proves me wrong, as I can learn from that.
Btw: you state you have an idea yourself about fish C. What do you think it is?
Edit: rephrased a sentence.
Last edited by Marc van Arc on 02 Nov 2014, 22:34, edited 1 time in total.
- 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
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Fish C looks like to me. Spots are ellipsoid in that species (vs. circular in ).
- msjinkzd
- Posts: 76
- Joined: 09 Nov 2009, 18:27
- I've donated: $125.00!
- My images: 13
- My cats species list: 16 (i:12, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 1 (i:0)
- My BLogs: 1 (i:0, p:13)
- Spotted: 4
- Location 1: york, PA, USA
- Location 2: PA; USA
- Interests: dwarf freshwater fish and invertebrates
- Contact:
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
A couple years ago I got fish from Peru that look identical to you woodcat A and got an id of Centromochlus macracanthus. I gave them to Regina Spotti- perhaps she has an idea?
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
has a forked caudal fin, whereas fish A ( imo) has a truncate caudal fin.msjinkzd wrote:A couple years ago I got fish from Peru that look identical to you woodcat A and got an id of Centromochlus macracanthus.
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Sorry Rupert, have to disagree with you on this one. I know the Tatia intermedia complex is very complex, yet I have never seen an intermedia patterned as bright and beautiful as this one. All intermedias I've seen so far, have an off-white rather stripey pattern, which disappears with age. Although I'm in favour of lumping, I'd say this is a different species based on pattern. Very unscientific, I know -)racoll wrote:Fish C looks like to me. Spots are ellipsoid in that species (vs. circular in ).
PS: when looking at the 4 pictures on the galaxias data sheet, I wonder if they are all the same species.... difficult stuff.
- 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
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
should have dark cross-bars and lack white spots on the caudal fin also, as can be seen the individual here. Small individuals, and individuals from blackwater habitats tend to have brighter spots on a darker body. Fish C looks quite small, compared to the size of the gravel.
All this info is in Sarmento-Soares & Martins-Pinheiro (2008).
All this info is in Sarmento-Soares & Martins-Pinheiro (2008).
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
If intermedia should not have white spots on the caudal, I've never kept intermedia....racoll wrote: should have dark cross-bars and lack white spots on the caudal fin also, as can be seen the individual here. Small individuals, and individuals from blackwater habitats tend to have brighter spots on a darker body. Fish C looks quite small, compared to the size of the gravel.
All this info is in Sarmento-Soares & Martins-Pinheiro (2008).
You may call me stubborn, but fig. 27 of the above publication clearly shows spots on the caudal - even in formalin. This is also to be found in the text btw.
I've corresponded with Dr. Ferraris about the fishes you see when hovering over wrt internal fertilization and he has never given me any reason to doubt these are intermedia.
Another feature that would set fish C apart from what I (used to?) know as intermedia is the hyaline caudal.
- 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
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
Yes, it does indeed. I think she was paraphrasing Mees in that remark, but did not expand and clarify it much. I find that paper inconsistent too. It says loud and clear that colour pattern cannot be used to identify several Tatia.You may call me stubborn, but fig. 27 of the above publication clearly shows spots on the caudal - even in formalin. This is also to be found in the text btw.
There should be a very obvious difference in eye size between the two species (21.4-26.3% HL in T. intermedia, vs. 37.0-42.9% in T. galaxias). However, I cannot see this in the figures, as they are of such bad quality. Neither can I make out the supposedly longer postcleithral process in T. galaxias.
Technically, T. intermedia (sensu stricto) has no spots at all (Fig 27a), but that picture worries me also: look at the anterior of the dorsal-fin spine in Fig 27a, it's completely lacking the serrations present in the other two T. intermedia.
This fish is the real T. intermedia:
From here.
-
- Expert
- Posts: 5038
- Joined: 19 Dec 2004, 14:38
- My articles: 20
- My images: 61
- My catfish: 9
- Spotted: 35
- Location 2: Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Re: A few from Iquitos to ID
This is recognizable to me as an adult male specimen (although the upper caudal lobe could have been a bit longer) with a faded pattern. When you look closely you can still see a hint of spots in the caudal. The juveniles and adolencents of the species I have kept had spots, which wore off once mature. But again, the whole intermedia "problem" is getting beyond my knowledge.....
A bit sloppy is the way the author made a Mess of Mees' name in the References.....
I completely agree with you on the Soares paper. It raises more questions than it provides answers.
Sorry to the OP for more or less hijacking this thread; I wouldn't have objected to this being in the Auchenipterid thread.