An interesting Collecting day

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duanes

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Isla Taboga Panama via Milwaukee
Being the rainy season, an easy escape route must be considered, in case walls of water surge down from the mountains, so we park partially up the bank so not to be caught pants down.
The Mamoni allowed for that access yesterday, and it was an interesting day to collect in the shallows, in the deeper sections, the flow was quite strong, and the fish seemed to want to stay out of the raging current.
3 individuals cichlids were found over about 3 hours, only Darienheros, no others from the cichlid family.

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Too large to keep, and/or maintain, so released were a Robalo (genus Centropomus)

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a predatory Goby,
IMG_6533.jpeg
and a large Macrobrachium shrimp.
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Kept , and brough home, were a couple tiny flounders (slightly over an inch) that disappeared ing my sump
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And this (what I think is) Eugerrus or Euctinostomus.
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These last two species are usually found in brackish water, but the area is quite far upstream from the sea.
The color of the water was chocolate brown, pH slightly below 8, and yet nitrates remained undetectable.
 
Being the rainy season, an easy escape route must be considered, in case walls of water surge down from the mountains, so we park partially up the bank so not to be caught pants down.
The Mamoni allowed for that access yesterday, and it was an interesting day to collect in the shallows, in the deeper sections, the flow was quite strong, and the fish seemed to want to stay out of the raging current.
3 individuals cichlids were found over about 3 hours, only Darienheros, no others from the cichlid family.

Image


Too large to keep, and/or maintain, so released were a Robalo (genus Centropomus)

Image

a predatory Goby,
View attachment 1567162
and a large Macrobrachium shrimp.
Image


Kept , and brough home, were a couple tiny flounders (slightly over an inch) that disappeared ing my sump
Image


Image


And this (what I think is) Eugerrus or Euctinostomus.
Image


These last two species are usually found in brackish water, but the area is quite far upstream from the sea.
The color of the water was chocolate brown, pH slightly below 8, and yet nitrates remained undetectable.
duanes duanes I wonder if the flounder's are the same species sometimes sold in the aquarium trade.
 
According to FishBase, Citharichthys gilberti, Achirus mazatlanus, and Trinectus maculatus and fluviatilis, are all found here, in fresh, and brackish water, and.
Since they are both tiny, I expect they are still in juvie coloration, so I´m pretty clueless about IDs.
These are the first flounders I ´ve caught here, and they have disappeared into the jungle of plants in the sump.
Maybe someone with more expertice can chime in?
 
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And this (what I think is) Eugerrus or Euctinostomus.
Image
That ^ is a very pretty and very interesting fish. Schooling, I assume? Did you keep any of these? Do they get large?

Oh, and...why do you collect with your pants down? :)
 
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