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Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 20:21
by racoll
Recent trip to the Tapajós river, Brazil.
Rocky habitats of the middle Tapajós upstream of Itaituba. Green water!
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 20:26
by racoll
Here we found:
. Very common.
. Not so common.
. Quite rare.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 20:33
by racoll
. Not so common.
. Pretty common.
. Very common.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 20:42
by racoll
. Not so common.
. Rare.
sp. Not sure which. Was of the ranunculus type with wide head.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 20:47
by racoll
. Not so common.
. Rare.
. Common.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 20:58
by racoll
Some of the diving gear.
Air compressor.
Air hose. The wire wrapped around is for a hand lamp. This tells them when the compressor is off, so they can surface, and also for light, if it's dark.
Divers out fishing about 4 m down.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:05
by racoll
The catch from a few dives.
Lots of L260. They sell for about US$1 each. I bought a nice male and female for my tank. $2 well spent, I think.
Big female L273. These were more expensive, at about $4 each.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:11
by racoll
More fishes, this time from a woody habitat.
. Very rare.
or similar.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:19
by racoll
Lasiancistrus face.
sp. Similar to
A. dolichopterus type. Not sure which L number.
And if you're bored of loricariids ...
, possibly similar to
.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:31
by racoll
The Lower Tapajós about half way along after it widens out at Aveiro.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:33
by plecoboy
Awesome pics.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:37
by racoll
from a very small stream (no photos).
? From around flooded trees on the main channel.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 21:54
by racoll
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 02 Oct 2013, 23:26
by dconnors
Awesome photos, thank you for sharing!
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 03:37
by Silurus
I'd be interested to see what kind of non-catfish you've been catching.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 09:52
by backstreetgambler
I love these threads! Gives a small insight into the actual habitat of my favourite fish. If you don't mind and if the info is available to you, could you post any water parameters? I would be particularly interested in the water temp. Thanks for sharing, very interesting!
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 11:18
by Richard B
Fantastic thread Rupert!!!
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 13:56
by jac
Impressive..!!
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 14:23
by Narwhal72
Great thread and fantastic photos.
I do have a couple of questions that may answer a mystery I have been struggling with for some time.
I spawned and raised up a couple of clutches of a Peckoltia that I purchased in 2012 as "Iatuba Tiger Plecos" that were supposedly a new import and did not have an L number assigned to it. I had originally thought them to be the same as L38 but the fry had a very different pattern from the fry pictured in the cat-e-log and I no longer believe that they are L38.
Looking at your thread I now realize that Iatuba is probably a corrupted version of "Itaituba".
The fish you have labeled as L140 looks very similar to the "Itaituba" Tiger plecos I have. Only difference is that the banding on mine is a bit wider.
So here are my questions:
1. Are you very sure about the ID of the fish in the picture as L140? I ask because the fish pictured in the cat-e-log do not look very much like either the fish pictured in this thread or my fish.
2. Did you see a lot of variation in the L140 type fish? Were the bands wider and narrower or were they pretty close to each other in appearance.
Thanks,
Andy
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 16:19
by panaque
Looks like a great gig you've got out there. Very jealous.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 16:43
by JamesFish
Great pictures looking forward to seeing some more.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:00
by racoll
backstreetgambler wrote:could you post any water parameters? I would be particularly interested in the water temp
Unfortunately my conductivity and temp meter packed up on me; batteries ran out unexpectedly. What I did measure was that the water surface of the slower moving lower Tapajós was 33C (also very soft, only 20 us or so). Upstream where the plecos were caught, the water ran faster, and it was also colder down a few metres near the bottom. I estimated the temp to be upper twenties. For the aquarium, I'd say about 28-30C is about right.
Narwhal72 wrote:Are you very sure about the ID of the fish in the picture as L140?
As far as I know, this is the only
type fish from the Tapajós, and was the only one we found near Itaituba. If your fish look the same as this, and they really did come from Itaituba, then I would call them
.
Narwhal72 wrote:Did you see a lot of variation in the L140 type fish?
Yes, but the distinctive thing about them was the very yellow colouration, but unfortunately the ones I photographed were a bit washed out. Here's another below. Look at the colour of the mouth. Also the banding will tend to get narrower as the fish gets older, I think.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:11
by racoll
Silurus wrote:I'd be interested to see what kind of non-catfish you've been catching.
As you know photography in the field is difficult and very time consuming. I couldn't photograph everything, so I prioritised the catfishes. Here's a few more pics. Let me know if there's anything in particular you are interested in.
?
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:18
by racoll
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:25
by racoll
? Only got one of these. Appears rare.
. Found quite a few of these. Relatively easy to collect.
Along with the
, both of these guys were caught hiding among mats of floating grasses in shallow water (as pictured earlier). Water was really warm here, maybe 35C.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:31
by racoll
? Found together with
in crevices in rocks/wood (below).
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:37
by racoll
The water was very warm here, over 33C where the Peckoltia L140 were found.
The holes the Peckoltia L140 were residing in. The "rock" was very soft here, more like hard mud, so I think they actually dug the holes themselves. They were about 2" wide and up to 12" deep.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:42
by racoll
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 19:51
by racoll
Finally, some non-catfishes.
Monocirrhus.
Gymnorhamphichthys.
Nice
Apistogramma cf.
agassizi.
Re: Rio Tapajós
Posted: 03 Oct 2013, 20:05
by racoll
Colomesus.
Little
Crenicichla.
Hoplias.