Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
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Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
I went through part of the Loricariidae list, I think this guy is part of the Hypostomus genus, but I'm not 100% sure. Any help would be appreciated. Apologies for the not completely clean glass/flash reflections.
- MatsP
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
Definitely , but I'm certainly not skilled enough to say which species it is - there are quite a few - and they are pretty much "the same" anyways.
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
This is
They still show up from time to time as bycatch in shipments from Colombia.
-Shane
They still show up from time to time as bycatch in shipments from Colombia.
-Shane
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- Carp37
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
I'd almost forgotten how pretty Hypostomus are. It's a shame they no longer breed these in SE Asia.
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus
- MatsP
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
I thought they were all wild-caught [I'm by no means saying you are wrong - just that my impression was that they were never bred comercially!]Carp37 wrote:It's a shame they no longer breed these in SE Asia.
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
Hi Mats- I remember seeing photos of plecs from fish farms in South East Asia in magazines dating from the early 1980s- they apparently basically just put large numbers of wild-caught fish in muddy, rectangular ponds, and netted the ponds after a period of time to remove juveniles for sale. At that time, nearly all non-gibbiceps "commons" sold in the UK were Hypostomus- Pterygoplichthys pardalis was a rare contaminant in those days. Somewhere in the early 1990s the balance shifted to most of the fish coming in being Pterygoplichthys, and Hypostomus seem to be a relatively uncommon import nowadays. I don't konw if they got out-competed in the breeding/raising ponds, or if there was a conscious shift towards (possibly more fecund) Pterygoplichthys. I believe the US still got largely wild-caught fish during this time, before fish farms in Florida took over, but could be wrong on that.
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus
- MatsP
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
I'm not 100% sure, but I believe the young fish that I bought in the early/mid 1980's was P. pardalis [not that I would have actually known the difference - at the time, I thought Loricariidae consisted of three genera which had a single species each, and since the fish didn't look like Farlowella or Sturisoma, they would have been Plecostomus by process of elimination - the book about Aquarium fish that I had only had these three, and I had not even considered that there could be more of them...
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Re: Help with ID of Hypostomus sp?
There may have been some pardalis in the UK as contaminants back then, but mine definitely had the shorter dorsal and fewer rays (about 7 soft rays???) characteristic of Hypostomus (or at least excluding Pterygos). Hypostomus had the distinct advantage of typically staying somewhat smaller than Pterygos. The first pardalis I saw was in the mid-90s, although I'd stopped running fishtanks after 1992. Gibbys did start appearing in the mid to late 80s.
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus