Many thanks for your swift identification, I see it now!Polypterus polli
Many thanks for your swift identification, I see it now!Polypterus polli
Very fascinating. Thanks for sharing.I wondered if someone might help me identify a species of polypterus?
The species in question occurs at roughly 19:00 to 19:42 of the below video. I've been leaning towards Guinean Bichir but would really like some second opinions.
Lately I have been trying to learn more about polypterus.P. bichir lapradei and P. bichir bichir are both just P. bichir. Lapradei is an ecotype, not subspecies (a lower classification to subspecies). There's many reasons for this, one of which is subspecies are typically regionally isolated types, but Lapradei exist in the same regions as other P. bichir and sometimes the same water bodies too.
I wouldn't say it's P. bichir vs Lapradei as they are the same fish, just with minor differences in their shared lakes/river systems.Lately I have been trying to learn more about polypterus.
Only one more week and I will hopefully hold the bichir handbook in my hands.
Would you mind to go more into detail with the last point on P. bichir vs lapradei?
How does existing in the same water bodies supports that it is an ecotype?
Are P. bichir and the former lapradai able to meet in the wild?
Or are they sepperated by natural barriers like for example rapids within the same waterbody?
Even a subspecies is still the same species, when Lapradei was a subspecies. P. bichir lapradei and P. bichir bichir were still just the species P. bichir. Nothing much has changed now, apart from we don't use their trinomal name in science as only the binomal name is valid. There would have to be a more significant difference for them to be a species of their own, and markings wouldn't really influence that anyway, as fishes are usually described from dead specimens which have washed out markings. All of their wild differences can be explained by variability in a population and their environment.Thanks. This helps. Especially the hint with the recent revision by Moritz and Britz was helpful. It just took me a while to find it. Most of the search results in google lead to your facebook or MFK.
Now I understand why the colour pattern and pigmentation is not enough to make "lapradei" a valid species in this case. There is simply too much variability and overlap to make a clear separation between the different P. bichir populations.
I just wish they would have said more about the different head shape mentioned by Steindachner.
I know haha, must have been a typo ?Thanks for the explanation again. Now I am even more eager to read the book.
Just a small hint. His name is Moritz not Mortiz.