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Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 28 Sep 2014, 16:30
by Marc van Arc
Absolutely awesome, mr. Collins, you made my day!!
Keep up the good work and share some more please.
Btw: any sightings of gymnotids?
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 28 Sep 2014, 22:09
by Marc van Arc
racoll wrote: (same as above)
DSC08383.JPG
Looks a lot like an (off colour)
racoll wrote:? (clearwater
igarapé forest stream)
DSC08258.JPG
Determination seems correct imo.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Sep 2014, 05:11
by racoll
Marc van Arc wrote:any sightings of gymnotids?
No photos, but we had small
Gymnotus, nice big
Gymnorhamphichthys, very pretty
Steatogenys (the look so similar to the
that you often can't tell them apart and first glance in the net), and
Eigenmannia. No really crazy ones like
Orthosternarchus though.
Looks a lot like an (off colour) Tatia musaica
It does rather, but the dark distal margin to the caudal is pretty distinctive in this fish though. Maybe part of the same species group?
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Sep 2014, 14:56
by Marc van Arc
racoll wrote:It does rather, but the dark distal margin to the caudal is pretty distinctive in this fish though. Maybe part of the same species group?
I'm a bit at a loss as to what a dark distal margin is, but if it has anything to do with a tail pattern (probably not....) it could also be
- in which case it is obviously from a different genus, yet from the same subfamily.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Sep 2014, 17:10
by naturalart
Awesome work Racoll. Really appreciate you giving the region of the river you found the fish in. Thank you for sharing.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Sep 2014, 18:42
by racoll
Marc van Arc wrote:I'm a bit at a loss as to what a dark distal margin is, but if it has anything to do with a tail pattern (probably not....) it could also be Centromochlus macracanthus - in which case it is obviously from a different genus, yet from the same subfamily.
So "dark distal margin" just refers to the colour pattern of the tail, yes. Basically a fancy way to say it has a black edge.
Marc van Arc wrote:it could also be Centromochlus macracanthus - in which case it is obviously from a different genus, yet from the same subfamily.
I still don't see the point in splitting
and
. Together they are a well diagnosed group with relatively few species. The two genera can only be told apart by experienced systematists with morphometrics and cleared and stained material to hand. Heck, even Vari & Ferraris (2013) had problems with
T. musaica. I'm all for nomenclature reflecting phylogeny, but not when it comes at the expense of a usable and easily communicable classification.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Sep 2014, 21:42
by Marc van Arc
racoll wrote:I still don't see the point in splitting
and
. Together they are a well diagnosed group with relatively few species. The two genera can only be told apart by experienced systematists with morphometrics and cleared and stained material to hand. Heck, even Vari & Ferraris (2013) had problems with
T. musaica. I'm all for nomenclature reflecting phylogeny, but not when it comes at the expense of a usable and easily communicable classification.
I couldn't agree more, although in my case it's more a matter of gut feelings combined with observations than a scientific approach, because I simply lack the knowledge.
Imho Mees' and Ferraris' systematics were workable; Soares-Porto made things rather complicated.
As a kind of lifetime auchenipterid keeper I should be able to distinguish genera by just looking at them, but I am often unable to do so in the case of Tatia vs Centromochlus.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Sep 2014, 23:06
by racoll
Marc van Arc wrote:As a kind of lifetime auchenipterid keeper I should be able to distinguish genera by just looking at them, but I am often unable to do so in the case of Tatia vs Centromochlus.
Quite!
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 30 Sep 2014, 00:22
by racoll
This is the type of
below. To me the snout looks flatter and longer than in the fish I collected. The upper jaw appears distinctly more prognathous in my fish.
Heok Hee (or anyone else), what do you reckon?
Here's another shot of a smaller one where you see the jaws better:
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 30 Sep 2014, 02:31
by Silurus
The relative jaw lengths appear different, but I'm not so sure about the snout. They seem the same length; your fish has what seems to be a more curved predorsal profile, but this difference might be due to dehydration in the preserved state of the type.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 30 Sep 2014, 02:52
by racoll
Thanks HH. I guess this is a situation where you really need both materials in hand to compare. Not sure if there's enough evidence here to make this work chasing up.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 30 Sep 2014, 17:39
by KungFish
Any other photos of the denticetopsis and helogenes?
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 30 Sep 2014, 19:06
by racoll
Here's a smaller
. Only other pictures of
are slightly more out-of-focus shots of the same fish.
Re: Rio Japurá
Posted: 29 Apr 2015, 05:38
by turtle lover
racoll wrote: (channel of main river)
DSC07289.JPG
(channel of main river)
DSC06988.JPG
or
Leptodoras cf.
copei (channel of main river)
DSC06834.JPG
The whale catfish or candiru acu reminds me of River Monsters.