Hi Larry, First of all, I hope you get well soon.
pleco_breeder wrote:..."if it's going to be done, make sure it's done in a way which isn't going to decrease the value of the work done by those who work so hard to provide useable information."
racoll wrote:To clarify, aquarists should definitely not be excluded from the process, but they are better off collaborating with scientists rather than doing their own thing. Both will benefit from the process.
Larry and Rupert, Thank you for voicing these concerns; I agree completely. Perhaps one of the benefits of this website is that it IS a mix of hobbyists and scientists (who also happen to be hobbyists

). In this social context, we are able to interact and work together, and perhaps we can make the most of the data that can be collected through all the reports and photos that can be compiled through this site. This way, we can avoid the free-wheeling that could lead to chaos.
pleco_breeder wrote:There was a great deal of discussion on the old catfish-l mailing list, prior to the existence of this site but a lot of the same original members, about the description of this species from aquarium specimens. Even the current species listing in the catelog states the type locality as "Aquarium specimens said to be from near the town of Boa Vista, State of Roraima, Brazil [possibly from the Rio Branco]." This leaves no verifiable locality and, while not doubting the validity of the species, a huge hole of valuable information in any future study. There are a lot of individuals on this site which would be completely capable of the same type of description based solely on measurement/proportion, and a lot more which are not members of this site. If all of those decided to begin tackling L numbers, based on Rio Xingu, Tapajos, etc... which are considered understood collection locations, the quality of the entire family could easily be degraded.
Larry, this actually goes to my point. Your concerns about the potential proliferation of species (would this also include the misidentification of specimens to existing species?) as a result of hobbyists collecting morphometric and morphological data and compiling it into a database is exactly how I felt before I joined this site, when I first discovered the existence of the C, CW, L, LDA, etc., numbered fishes. From the outside, it seemed to me that anybody with a fish that didn't already have a known species label could give it a number and voila, a new fish is introduced to the hobby. Now of course these numbers don't really work that way, but what I still feel is lacking (and I've expressed this in another thread when I first joined) is solid morphometric and morphological descriptions for each of these cats, with details such as number of rays per fin, body proportions, etc., (the kind of data which would be found in a standard scientific paper describing a species). If this type of data can be collected, compiled and presented in a systematic fashion, it will at least make it easier for hobbyists (like myself when I bought my C141) to figure out what we have when we get an unidentified fish, since color patterns can vary with age, size, and geography. Moreover, if done right, this should tighten up the various C, CW, L, LDA numbered fish categories because we can have accessible standards for comparison. Thus, it might allow new fish to be lumped in with preexisting numbers rather than putting them into new numbers of their own.
pleco_breeder wrote:As to the graph done above, I'd like to say thank you for that bit of work. I've considered the angle of the head from tip of the snout to the base of the head to be the most valuable sexual dimorphism feature of a large percentage of species for quite a while, and agree it needs to be taken from known mature specimens. This is a nicer representation of that, at least in method since I don't consider these fish to be of mature size, than I could've put together.
Thank you!

Although honestly, the credit needs to go to @jamesleagas and @jac for their wonderful photos, to jamesleagas for getting this thread started, and to @jools for asking for the angle calculations (my head width/head length ratio provides an equivalent metric for head shape since it uses the same exact measures to calculate, but I can see how the snout angle calculation is more intuitively meaningful for anyone trying to describe the shape of the head and snout). I didn't know much about these fish before this thread, but I know more now!
pleco_breeder wrote:With regard to the original poster, my advice would be to grow them out for another 6-12 months and post pictures when they are in a better condition and more mature.
Great advice. Moreover, if these fish are allowed to grow out for a year and if we can redo these measurements using the same morphological landmarks, then whether or not the proportions change we will have learned something: Either they change and these turn out to be females, or they don't change and the fish turn out to be males, or the numbers change for some of them and we get a mix of males and females in the bunch... or they don't change because the fish still aren't sexually mature

... or we get entirely different numbers and we can't make any inferences from the growth data.

Obviously, I hope it's one of the first three options (all of these would validate the hypothesis that we can use these photographic measures to identify gender, and they would also help us know at what age (older vs. younger) the ratios can be applied reliably) and not one of the latter two options.
racoll wrote:We are going rather off topic here (so apologies to OP, and mods feel free to move).
Ditto.
Cheers, Eric