Pictures aren't great as rarely see it out, and these were taken with the tank lights out and flash.



Thanks
Martin
Thanks HH - interesting. The unusual colour was one of the things that made me think it was B. amazonicus, though the skin 'tone' is different from your close-up pictures.Silurus wrote:I don't think that is B. amazonicus. My guess would be one of the dwarf Bunocephalus species such as Bunocephalus quadriradiatus or Bunocephalus iheringii. That said, the head seems unusually deep for either one of these species and it may very well turn out to be something undescribed.
Ignore color. Color is almost useless for distinguishing aspredinids.
Hi SteveThe.Dark.One wrote:I have one of these and was unable to identify it. I checked with John Friel and he too could not ID it, using images. IMO it is not a Pseudobunocephalus as in that genus the caudal fin is different to Bunocephalus. Yours has the caudal fin of a Bunocephalus. How many anal fin rays has it got, just to ensure it is not a Pterobunocephalus (I don't think it is based on the length of the body in comparison with the anterior portion of the body, and head).
Will find it, and get some shots to include the anal fin and underside. Won't be until the weeken though.The.Dark.One wrote:It could be. The easy way to decide this is to have a shot of the underside of the body - Martin?
Thanks Nate.nvcichlids wrote:I am no expert on catfish, but I would lean more towards the melanistic idea rather than anything else. Thats just my 2 cents and reguardless you have one awesome fish Martin!
OK, thanks for that Steve - much appreciated.The.Dark.One wrote:Hi Martin
IMO it is not amazonicus, or a Pterobunocephalus, as the caudal and the anal are wrong for those (respectively). The posterior process of the coracoids are too short for coracoideus. Looks like a pale colombianus, or an undescribed Bunocephalus sp. My money is on a pale colombianus.
Thanks again SteveThe.Dark.One wrote:It has the right body shape for colombianus. The shorter coracoid processes and the higher number of anal fin rays point towards colombianus (which can vary in colour). Not 100% confirmed but I would suggest the genital area structure is similar to Erethistidae, so looking at the the structure, and the body shape I would guess it is a male, but I'm not 100% sure.