I.D. Please
I.D. Please
We catch these in our net when collecting bait to fish with.
This one was caught in Calaveras Lake San Antonio, TX on 05/11/06.
Here is a link to a video I made of the fishing trip.
http://lonestarsharkers.com/Videos/Wall ... 051106.wmv
Thanks for any help in IDing.
This one was caught in Calaveras Lake San Antonio, TX on 05/11/06.
Here is a link to a video I made of the fishing trip.
http://lonestarsharkers.com/Videos/Wall ... 051106.wmv
Thanks for any help in IDing.
- Silurus
- Posts: 12420
- Joined: 31 Dec 2002, 11:35
- I've donated: $12.00!
- My articles: 55
- My images: 893
- My catfish: 1
- My cats species list: 90 (i:1, k:0)
- Spotted: 424
- Location 1: Singapore
- Location 2: Moderator Emeritus
- Dave Rinaldo
- Posts: 2178
- Joined: 31 Dec 2002, 10:49
- I've donated: $601.00!
- My images: 238
- My cats species list: 64 (i:0, k:0)
- Spotted: 97
- Location 2: Austin, Texas
-
- Posts: 1395
- Joined: 25 Jul 2003, 21:40
- I've donated: $30.00!
- My articles: 1
- My images: 37
- My cats species list: 5 (i:0, k:0)
- Spotted: 9
- Location 1: Sweden
- Location 2: Sweden
This might be of interest to the OP:
http://el.erdc.usace.army.mil/elpubs/pd ... -v04-1.pdf
http://el.erdc.usace.army.mil/elpubs/pd ... -v04-1.pdf
- Shane
- Expert
- Posts: 4625
- Joined: 30 Dec 2002, 22:12
- My articles: 69
- My images: 162
- My catfish: 75
- My cats species list: 4 (i:75, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 4 (i:4)
- Spotted: 99
- Location 1: Tysons
- Location 2: Virginia
- Contact:
I believe it would be very useful as there is not a lot of information with regards to which spp. have gone feral.
Good general body shots are important with the dorsal rays held erect as are close ups of the mouth and dentition.
-Shane
Good general body shots are important with the dorsal rays held erect as are close ups of the mouth and dentition.
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Shane, will take pics as you indicated next time. Should I post them here or e-mail them to someone and what other info should I make note of?
CEfire, It is illegal to kill fin fish unless they are going to be consumed or used for bait even alien / exotics in Texas. There is a lot of them in the San Antonio river and the two power plant lakes (Calaveras lake and Braunig Lake) that take water from the river. I donâ??t know why more is not being done to control them.
Also, a good many that we have caught do have deformities. Any ideas on why this is so?
CEfire, It is illegal to kill fin fish unless they are going to be consumed or used for bait even alien / exotics in Texas. There is a lot of them in the San Antonio river and the two power plant lakes (Calaveras lake and Braunig Lake) that take water from the river. I donâ??t know why more is not being done to control them.
Also, a good many that we have caught do have deformities. Any ideas on why this is so?
- Shane
- Expert
- Posts: 4625
- Joined: 30 Dec 2002, 22:12
- My articles: 69
- My images: 162
- My catfish: 75
- My cats species list: 4 (i:75, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 4 (i:4)
- Spotted: 99
- Location 1: Tysons
- Location 2: Virginia
- Contact:
Here would be great. The deformities could be from several issues ranging from pollution, developing at colder temps than they were meant to, and suriving attacks from Bass and predators much more frequently than other fishes due to their armor and other defenses (locking pectorals, dorsal spines, etc).
-Shane
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
- MatsP
- Posts: 21038
- Joined: 06 Oct 2004, 13:58
- My articles: 4
- My images: 28
- My cats species list: 117 (i:33, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 10 (i:8)
- My BLogs: 4 (i:0, p:97)
- Spotted: 187
- Location 1: North of Cambridge
- Location 2: England.
No to mention inbreeding due to a very small original population, if the story I read is correct - that they escaped from a burst tank in San Antonio Zoo... Probably only two or three fish in that case. Could of course be that some tank-busters have been released too...Shane wrote:Here would be great. The deformities could be from several issues ranging from pollution, developing at colder temps than they were meant to, and suriving attacks from Bass and predators much more frequently than other fishes due to their armor and other defenses (locking pectorals, dorsal spines, etc).
-Shane
--
Mats
-
- Posts: 2198
- Joined: 31 Aug 2004, 16:01
- I've donated: $100.00!
- My articles: 6
- My images: 13
- My cats species list: 17 (i:0, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 7 (i:7)
- Spotted: 6
- Location 1: Sharon, Massachusetts, US
- sidguppy
- Posts: 3827
- Joined: 18 Jan 2004, 12:26
- My articles: 1
- My images: 28
- My aquaria list: 5 (i:0)
- Spotted: 9
- Location 1: Southern Netherlands near Belgium
- Location 2: Noord Brabant, Netherlands
- Interests: African catfishes and oddballs, Madagascar cichlids; stoner doom and heavy rock; old school choppers and riding them, fantasy novels, travelling and diving in the tropics and all things nature.
- Contact:
two sources spring to mind:Also, a good many that we have caught do have deformities. Any ideas on why this is so?
is there an outlet from a nuclear plant upstream? maybe radiation leaks in the cooling water and it causes mutations, cancer and deformities in the fish.
Also I recently studied a paper on mercury pollution in the US, it didn't exactly made me happy; there's a lot of heavy metal pollution going on an d stuff like that causes a lot of bad growths on fish.
another cause might be pesticides getting in the water from nearby veggie-farming or PCB, Bromides; you name it.
A pleco is a fish that eats a LOT of stuff during its' life, so it accumulates loads of bad stuff, in fact its' liver works a bit like a coalfilter.
hope you don't plan on eating them; deformed fish might be quite toxic.
Valar Morghulis
Sorry about the late reply, but I was waiting for a response from a fishing buddy who is "in the know" when it come to the water/air quality of Calaveras Lake.
Here is his reply to my question about the water quality and fish deformities in Calaveras Lake.
******************************************************************
From: Electric Water Boy
The water in Braunig and Calaveras is clean. I have a report on the mercury somewhere in my computer, but the levels are like a zillion times lower than the EPA standard. Nature is the big mercury producer, not coal plants. Medical incinerators put mercury out at a lot higher rate than coal plants, but they haven't been targeted... yet that is.
The fish deformities come from injuries.
******************************************************************
Iâ??m also sorry about dragging this thread up, I just wanted to set things straight about the conditions of the water in this lake.
Here is his reply to my question about the water quality and fish deformities in Calaveras Lake.
******************************************************************
From: Electric Water Boy
The water in Braunig and Calaveras is clean. I have a report on the mercury somewhere in my computer, but the levels are like a zillion times lower than the EPA standard. Nature is the big mercury producer, not coal plants. Medical incinerators put mercury out at a lot higher rate than coal plants, but they haven't been targeted... yet that is.
The fish deformities come from injuries.
******************************************************************
Iâ??m also sorry about dragging this thread up, I just wanted to set things straight about the conditions of the water in this lake.
-
- Posts: 1395
- Joined: 25 Jul 2003, 21:40
- I've donated: $30.00!
- My articles: 1
- My images: 37
- My cats species list: 5 (i:0, k:0)
- Spotted: 9
- Location 1: Sweden
- Location 2: Sweden
Regarding the deformations...
For what it's worth, and bear in mind that I have no knowledge of the local situation wrt pollution in your area...
It is known that stationary bottom-dwelling fish - like loricarids - develop spine deformations as a result of various toxins, notably organohalogens (like ddt or creosote) or heavy metals (like tin, copper, arsenic or mercury). Apparently what happens is that the poison interferes with the formation of bone, and when the fish swims, it snaps its own back. The broken spine heals, but remains deformed. Usually the fish snap their own backs multiple times.
I don't know if anyone's looked specifically at loricarids, but I've seen a study which found that 10 - 54% of fourhorn sculpins living close to Swedish paper mills or ore smelteries had deformed spines, much like the one on your picture.
If I saw deformations like these on a regular basis, that would to me be a very strong indication that there was some pollution, from, say, a paper mill or a lumber yard or oil refinery or metalworks, present in the sediment, although the factory itself might be long since gone.
For what it's worth, and bear in mind that I have no knowledge of the local situation wrt pollution in your area...
It is known that stationary bottom-dwelling fish - like loricarids - develop spine deformations as a result of various toxins, notably organohalogens (like ddt or creosote) or heavy metals (like tin, copper, arsenic or mercury). Apparently what happens is that the poison interferes with the formation of bone, and when the fish swims, it snaps its own back. The broken spine heals, but remains deformed. Usually the fish snap their own backs multiple times.
I don't know if anyone's looked specifically at loricarids, but I've seen a study which found that 10 - 54% of fourhorn sculpins living close to Swedish paper mills or ore smelteries had deformed spines, much like the one on your picture.
If I saw deformations like these on a regular basis, that would to me be a very strong indication that there was some pollution, from, say, a paper mill or a lumber yard or oil refinery or metalworks, present in the sediment, although the factory itself might be long since gone.