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I guess that it's understandable that the range of A. allpahuayo is restricted to the Allpahuayo/Minshana National Reserve in Uwe's paper. He restricted the range to locations of specimens he had at the time of its writing. This species, however, was unknown in the lower Nanay system until well after it was first discovered by Mortenthaler's father-in-law near the village of Diamante Azul on the Alto Nanay (not the town of the same name on the Río Napo) in the early 1990s. Julio Melgar collected it nearby, near Santa Maria de Alto Nanay, a year or so later. Two years ago TomC and MarkB (Microman) collected the species in the lower Río Pinoyacu near its mouth on the Alto Nanay.
A. allpahuayo was not known from the lower Nanay until it became a commercially valuable species. Then it suddenly appeared in pools and streams near Iquitos, along the Iquitos-Nauta highway - the only paved road out of Iquitos to the south. These same pools and streams had been collected/sampled by scientists/hobbyists/commercial collectors for decades. I wonder whether or not the fish used for the paper actually are transplants. Collectors have moved popular species to streams & pool close to Iquitos in the past. Collectors would then be able to collect these fish without having to travel long distances. The 'wild' Peruvian Discus are a good example. These discus appear to have been moved from Brazil. Genetically they are similar to the Rio Tefé population. As far as I know, there are no Discus populations between the Rio Tefé and the fish found near Iquitos. Discus belong to a completely different faunal realm.
TomC, Julio Melgar & I were discussing this recently when Julio brought up and got me thinking about transplanted commercial species. I just thought some of the members here might find it interesting. This certainly doesn't invalidate any of Uwe's paper.
A. allpahuayo was not known from the lower Nanay until it became a commercially valuable species. Then it suddenly appeared in pools and streams near Iquitos, along the Iquitos-Nauta highway - the only paved road out of Iquitos to the south. These same pools and streams had been collected/sampled by scientists/hobbyists/commercial collectors for decades. I wonder whether or not the fish used for the paper actually are transplants. Collectors have moved popular species to streams & pool close to Iquitos in the past. Collectors would then be able to collect these fish without having to travel long distances. The 'wild' Peruvian Discus are a good example. These discus appear to have been moved from Brazil. Genetically they are similar to the Rio Tefé population. As far as I know, there are no Discus populations between the Rio Tefé and the fish found near Iquitos. Discus belong to a completely different faunal realm.
TomC, Julio Melgar & I were discussing this recently when Julio brought up and got me thinking about transplanted commercial species. I just thought some of the members here might find it interesting. This certainly doesn't invalidate any of Uwe's paper.