jcardona1;4204646; said:ive been asking the same question for the longest time now. with all these supposedly "wild caught" orinos, why dont we see intermedias? afterall, the come from the same bodies of water. and if you spend some time looking at south american fishing forums, youll see that guys catch intermedias as often as they do orinos. so why arent fisherman exporting these highly sought-after fish that?
why? because we're all being misled, that is why. ive said it before, i dont think all these cichla are truly wild caught. people are just being suckered by a marketing gimmick that is genius. call them "wild caught" and slap a premium on them. the bitter truth is, that wild caught or not makes no difference really. and besides, you cant tell if a fish is wild or not just by looking at it. so then what?
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X-Tank;4232459; said:they are actually solid 3" now.lol[/QUOTE
Just plan your trip bro....![]()
R1_Ridah;4233074; said:Now that would be a trip of a lifetime for sure!!!!I would definatly be usen the fly rod 24 -7X-Tank;4232459; said:they are actually solid 3" now.lol[/QUOTE
Just plan your trip bro....![]()
R1_Ridah;4233071; said:Things I wouldn't believe.
2. Some no name hobbyist who all of a sudden has connections.
apriliarider15;4234204; said:Well I came up with 103. I counted 3 times. I'm going to call Paul today to see if that is a 100% certain marker for C. intermedia. Yesterday I asked him if C. intermedia shoal with other species similar to how C. kelberi and C. piquiti do in Brazil. He said that the three species occupy different niches in the river. The only time any two of them meet would be at spawning time and those two are C. temensis and C. orinocensis. C. intermedia stays in the high flow, rocky part of the river. C. temensis likes the slow flow deeper lagoons and C. orinocensis likes the slow flow shallower lagoons. So from him saying that I think it would be impossible for a collector to mistake this species with another given the were found in the right niche in the river. Here are two papers if you guys want to read some more on the three species. http://www2.fiu.edu/~laymanc/PDFs/pdf%201.pdf http://wfsc.tamu.edu/winemiller/lab/Jepsen_etal_JFB97.pdf