Yuri
New Member
- Messages
- 22
- Location
- Glasgow, Scotland
I will insert this map so that people can see the Amazon River since we are talking about various localities... easier to understand...

Mike, there are 2 things I would like to make clear (as much as possible of course) about A. agassizii (Type Form):
1. I would like to find out how many color variations of the wild Type Form are presented (known) at the moment.
In truth, not that many. There are probably under 100 scientific collecting localities listed. Most of these are for preserved fish without color descriptions. There are actually even fewer collecting locations reported by hobbyist/collectors, but I would bet that there are many more A. aggassizii collected by them than scientists. I know that TomC and I collected A. agassizii at most of the collecting sites that we checked. Often we would not keep the fish. We would just take photos in a specimen cup (too many fish; too little space:frown2. How many actual (aka clearly recorded) collection places of the wild Type Form do we know?
It would be fairly easy (but tedious) to research the collecting sites in the scientific literature. It is mostly published or logged in museum collections. It would be much more difficult to get information from private hobbyists. First, no one has a comprehensive list of private collectors who have collected A. agassizii in the wild. Second, not all collectors can accurately locate where they collected their fish! TomC used a GPS locator, so our collecting sites are fairly accurate. Earlier collectors could only guess - and even now most collectors are more interested in the fish than accurately determining where they were found! Then there are the professional collectors. These people collect in a general area and mix fish from several nearby collecting localities. By nearby I mean within a day's walk of their base camp. This could be tens of kilometers! Then the fish from this day are added to fish from other nearby locations, from the days before and the days after. Then these fish are mixed with fish at the export stations with those from other collectors fish. For your purposes, they can't be used.[/QUOTE]Certainly photographs would help a lot. And if we know a collector name, exact location (co-ordinates even better), collection date, etc we can make (at least to start to do a A. agassizii database.
I wish that I could put it on a web site, but I cannot. Many of the photos are not mine. I am fortunate to know apistophiles from all over the world who allow me to use their photos. I always ask permission and promise to use them only in talks that I give. I promise that I will not to make money on the photos or allow them to be spread around without permission.It will be very much appreciated if you can share your photos / info about that slide show you had six years ago since most of us could not be there and enjoy your conversation.
That is true. No book or internet source can possibly provide all of the data that you want. It is just too vast and no one has all of the data! This is why most authors (and that includes me!) only provide general collecting localities (parts of river systems, nearby villages, etc.) when describing collecting sites.Apistogramma agassizii is the most complicated subcomplex (CA 2, U. Römer, p. 293, Phylogenetic organization... REGAN) from the Apistogramma genus... that's why I have started this thread. None of the mentioned at the beginning of this thread books give you clear info on this... nor discrete internet sources...
Interesting thread!
Here are a few pics of the couple I maintain, given last week-end by a friend.
These are a offspring from a wild couple (F1).
They have been ID'd but before I give you the species name (according to previous owner) I would like to have a second opinion from you or Mike:
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