Pics are from Romanos' (1992) "Peces Ornamentales de Venezuela"
-Shane
I am not ready to say that A sp. 3 is A. bodenhameri. It does look very similar to A sp. 3 based on the single photo from Romano, but we would need more photos of a series of wild caught specimens of various ages. We would also need to confirm that Romano has the correct photo with the correct ID in his book as the book contains a few mis-identifications. That said, the general distribution of A. bodenhameri supports a theory that I have always had. That is that A sp. 3 came from someplace where collection was very common in the past but has been cut off for many years (thus the lack of wild A. sp 3 imports). Northern Venezuela would match that description, but I agree Guayana is just as possible. The hardiness of A sp. 3 (i.e. adaptability to wide temps and water parameters) also points, to my mind, to a northern South America piedmont sp vs. an Amazonian animal where conditions are much more stable.I mean, what we could do is pull all the "ring tailed" ones out and put them in A. bodenhameri. We'd still be left with fishes in A. sp(3) though, wouldn't we?
I thought there was something odd about it. I just couldn't put my finger on it.Oh, well, that's easy then, no way can sp(3) be a match with the description - the latter shows a species with no pelvic fins!
The original description does state: "...a pale bar across base of caudal fin rays on caudal peduncle..."
It is kind of the reverse. With we knew what we were calling the fish then looked at the decription and there was a disconnect.bronzefry wrote:Remember the Chaetostoma spp. mess? Once everybody looked at the original description, etc.....could this be something similar?
I´ll give it a try.. ;) Though I´m far from being a native english speaker..I will skip the origin of the first description and synonymy..Can anyone translate the German in Wels Atlas II?
According to Schultz, A. Bodenhameri can be told from the similar and neighboring (silly expression in english....) A. Martini and A. Triradiatus by the light dots, which are most pronounced in the front part of the body and by the black spot located in the lower dorsal, between the the first and the second ray, no black spots in front of the dorsal and a light bar at the caudal peduncle.
Mike,Mike_Noren wrote:Has anyone got a piece of muscle or a finclip preserved in alcohol of a bona-fide, well-identified, capture-locality-known, A. bodenhameri? If so I can volunteer to barcode it (and a couple of sp3).
It wouldn't be conclusive as no other Ancistrus appear to have been barcoded yet, but I haven't got anything better to do at the moment, and it could give us a pretty good idea.
That's too big a leap of faith for me. What if an externally visually near identical species exists other piedmont drainages thousands of miles away...apistomaster wrote:It sure seems like this could be the origin of our species 3.
Not just because of the resemblance but the fact that of adaptability factor of the coastal piedmont environment.