Back from the Amazon, again
- Shane
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Back from the Amazon, again
Hello all,
Some snapshots I took last week while collecting in the Amazon.
Felipe Parra standing next to some big pims at a fish vendors packing facility in Leticia, Colombia.
Francisco Castellanos and I in a Yagua village. We stopped here because the Yagua told us there were Discus, but all we collected were angelfish.
Collecting angelfish with the Yagua. I am in the hat.
We came across this kid who was fishing loricariids in the black water Rio Gamboa. Sorting through his catch we found three spp.
A close up.
Lunch time!
End of a typical day cruising into the sunset.
Some snapshots I took last week while collecting in the Amazon.
Felipe Parra standing next to some big pims at a fish vendors packing facility in Leticia, Colombia.
Francisco Castellanos and I in a Yagua village. We stopped here because the Yagua told us there were Discus, but all we collected were angelfish.
Collecting angelfish with the Yagua. I am in the hat.
We came across this kid who was fishing loricariids in the black water Rio Gamboa. Sorting through his catch we found three spp.
A close up.
Lunch time!
End of a typical day cruising into the sunset.
"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
- spiny
- Posts: 106
- Joined: 10 Nov 2003, 00:29
- Location 1: Oslo,Norway
- Interests: Fish,cacti,orchids,botany,biology,being up in the mountains, out in the forest, or sailing the ocean, etc etc
Back from Amazonas
Nice photos! One photo tells more than 1000 words! You are very welcome to show as many as you like!
Amazing how many Loricariids it is, in that boat! How long had he been fishing? And in how large an area? Does the Loricariid spp in nature regenerate rapidly?
I just wonder why I sit here in Scandinavia doing securitywork, when I could do a lot more interesting things at warmer latitudes...
Thanks for inspiring me!
Amazing how many Loricariids it is, in that boat! How long had he been fishing? And in how large an area? Does the Loricariid spp in nature regenerate rapidly?
I just wonder why I sit here in Scandinavia doing securitywork, when I could do a lot more interesting things at warmer latitudes...
Thanks for inspiring me!
Bjorn H S
"Oh, uh, this..the moon is in the wrong position!"
Ozzy Osbourne
"Oh, uh, this..the moon is in the wrong position!"
Ozzy Osbourne
- Yann
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- Shane
- Expert
- Posts: 4625
- Joined: 30 Dec 2002, 22:12
- My articles: 69
- My images: 161
- My catfish: 75
- My cats species list: 4 (i:75, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 5 (i:5)
- Spotted: 99
- Location 1: Tysons
- Location 2: Virginia
- Contact:
Yann,
I am not sure that Felipe would be happy if he knew you called him a "little boy." He is a Colombian biologist. Felipe is about 5'4" or so.
Spiny,
I doubt that loricariids are over fished as they are pretty much just fished for local consumption. The main problem is that they are caught with gill nets and lots of fish are wasted. You can always tell where someone is gill netting as there are many dead floating fish downstream of their fishing location. The boat load represents about four hours fishing with a 200 foot long gill net. The net is run perpendicular to the bank and catches the loricariids as they try to leave or return to their nests in the bank. I would also imagine that the populations regenerate quickly as Glyptopterichthys produce large broods and the fry are protected by the parents for the first week or so. The fry also have ample food (algae) and few predators. I am sure that the survival rate is much better for loricariids than say for tetra or cichlid fry.
-Shane
I am not sure that Felipe would be happy if he knew you called him a "little boy." He is a Colombian biologist. Felipe is about 5'4" or so.
Spiny,
I doubt that loricariids are over fished as they are pretty much just fished for local consumption. The main problem is that they are caught with gill nets and lots of fish are wasted. You can always tell where someone is gill netting as there are many dead floating fish downstream of their fishing location. The boat load represents about four hours fishing with a 200 foot long gill net. The net is run perpendicular to the bank and catches the loricariids as they try to leave or return to their nests in the bank. I would also imagine that the populations regenerate quickly as Glyptopterichthys produce large broods and the fry are protected by the parents for the first week or so. The fry also have ample food (algae) and few predators. I am sure that the survival rate is much better for loricariids than say for tetra or cichlid fry.
-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