Payara
March 13th, 2013 — 11:51am
H. armatus should probably not be considered a home aquarium subject at all given its eventual size and migratory natural behaviour.
Unfortunately, juveniles are seen for sale quite regularly, most often without adequate information regarding their long-term care, and it’s common to see them being maintained in medium-sized aquaria with no possibility of achieving their potential.
2 comments » | Category: Characiformes, The Rest
March 7th, 2013 — 11:52am
This species does appear in the aquarium trade from time-to-time, often among shipments of other wild-caught fishes from the Orinoco basin.
Populations from Colombia were formerly referred to as C. metae until Zarske (2011) synonymised the two when designating a lectoty…
4 comments » | Category: Characiformes, Pencilfishes & ‘Splashing Tetras’
Spotted Splashing Tetra
March 6th, 2013 — 3:27pm
This species has been widely referred to as the congener C. nattereri in aquarium literature both prior to and post-publication of its official description in 2006.
The two can be told apart quite easily by the fact that C. nattereri possesses a dark lateral stripe while C. meinkeni does not.
C. meinkeni can be distinguished from all congeners by the followi…
Comment » | Category: Characiformes, Pencilfishes & ‘Splashing Tetras’
March 5th, 2013 — 9:52am
This species was described from a single specimen and included in the genus Leporinus until 2011 at which point the holotype was examined and recognised as corresponding to the fish described as Synaptolaemus cingulatus (Myers & Fernández-Yépez, 1950).
Comment » | Category: Characiformes, Headstanders
February 27th, 2013 — 3:32pm
Décor is relatively unimportant and maintenance simple provided sufficient space is available.
A natural-style arr…
Comment » | Category: Characiformes, Headstanders
Lipstick Leporinus
February 27th, 2013 — 1:56pm
Type locality is ‘Tukeit, Guyana’, and this species is known from various river drainages of Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana including the Orinoco, Essequibo, and upper Courantyne (aka Corantijn) basins.
Additional records exist from the upper Amazon basin in Guyana, these presumably corresponding to the Takutu river basin, itself part of the upper rio Branco.
Comment » | Category: Characiformes, Headstanders
February 27th, 2013 — 12:02pm
Type locality is given simply as ‘Amazon River, Brazil’ and according to current thinking this species has a huge natural range encompassing the Amazon River system in Brazil and Peru plus the Paraná-Paraguay drainage in southern Brazil and Paraguay and rio São Francisco basin in southern Brazil.
Specimens in our images were collected fro…
Comment » | Category: Characiformes, Headstanders
October 18th, 2012 — 4:31pm
This is the smallest member of the genus and rarely traded in numbers, though it’s a relatively common contaminant among shipments of wild fishes from Manaus. Unlike other Nannostomus spp. it does not exhibit a specific colour pattern of spots or bars at night-time, rather displaying an overall paleness.
The family Lebiasinidae is included in the order Characiformes and sometimes split into the nominal subfamilies Lebiasininae a…
Comment » | Category: Characiformes, Pencilfishes & ‘Splashing Tetras’
May 6th, 2012 — 6:44pm
This rich feeding ground is exploited until the sea water returns, at which point the catfishes begin to migrate upstream in massive numbers, moving up the Amazon and its tributaries. Sexually mature individuals are not normally recorded during these events so they’re thought related to feeding and dispersal rather than spawning. The fish are subject to intensive capture by commercial and artisanal fishing operations during this upstream movement.
Comment » | Category: Antennae Catfishes & relatives, Siluriformes
Dourada
May 6th, 2012 — 1:05pm
Study of B. rousseauxii has revealed that sexually mature adults are found only in the western Amazon, with no mature individual ever recorded east of Manaus despite the intensive commercial fishery operating there. The total distance covered by some populations during migration from the delta was as much as 5500 km, making it the longest known in any freshwater fish species.
Comment » | Category: Antennae Catfishes & relatives, Siluriformes
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