Meat Eater

jjohnwm

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Not sure where this post belongs, so I'll stick it here. For those unfamiliar with the title, Meat Eater is a hunting/fishing show available on Netflix and elsewhere, hosted by a fellow named Steve Rinella. He has several episodes devoted to a trip he made on the Rewa River in Guyana, guided by a local fisherman. Aside from the typical South American fishing trip that produces Piranha, Red-tailed Cats, Payara, etc., he also visits a remote section of the river that is a frightening violent white-water stretch incorporating multiple small waterfalls. The rocks are covered with an abundant growth of some type of leafy long-stemmed plant which in turn attracts huge numbers of pacu, which he takes with archery tackle.

The fish all seem to be in the 15-18 inch range, and are clearly pacu; in some shots they look similar in shape to Black Pacu, and some seem to exhibit the typical colouration of that species. But most of them show a lot of bright red colours, some with scattered black splotches. A few of them were virtually all bright red, body and fins...absolutely spectacular fish. The host describes them as "more bad-*** than salmon", because they actually remain and feed for long periods in these incredible torrents, as opposed to salmon that merely pass through as quickly as they are able.

"The show is well worth a look just to see these fish. It's also a terrific hunting/fishing show, far more thoughtful and insightful than the typical "Bubba goes a-huntin' with his buddies" format of many of these shows.
 

jjohnwm

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Is this one of the fish you saw? View attachment 1461482
It’s called a “hairy pacu” tometes kranponha- I have 6 growing out with my bass. Really cool silver dollar species
Hard to tell; the Tometes you show, and the other specimens I find with a quick google search, seem to be a bit more slender and "pointy" compared to the very round fish in the show. Google says 37cm max, but I would guess that all the fish he caught exceeded that. Colour is tough, they showed a huge variation from one to the next; none exactly like the one you show, but most or all were much brighter and redder overall. None of them displayed those tendrils on the fins. The anal fins on some had that enlarged rounded point, like a broader version of the Red Hook tail.

The locals in the show were referring to the fish as Pacu, for what that's worth, and prized them as a food fish. The background in the pic you show looks similar, if somewhat tamer than the rough water in which he was shooting them.
 

esoxlucius

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I'll check this programme out tonight, sounds interesting. Cheers for the heads up. :thumbsup:
 

Rob909

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These are the fish you’re referring to, jjohnwm jjohnwm
They’re from season 7 episode 11
The photos do not do these fish justice and Netflix will not let you screenshot.
DA72F901-595D-4297-8883-D9778F7EE3B8.jpeg
edit: found a better photo that isn’t from Netflix.
 
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FJB

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Is this one of the fish you saw? View attachment 1461482
It’s called a “hairy pacu” tometes kranponha- I have 6 growing out with my bass. Really cool silver dollar species
Super cool!
Where were you able to order juvenile of T. kranponnhah? By the way, this species nwas only very recently described (Andrade et al., 2016), although it has been known by and used as food to locals of the Xingu River area. Super awesome??

Would you post pictures of your young kranpohnah?? Pretty please?
 
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Matteus

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Hard to tell; the Tometes you show, and the other specimens I find with a quick google search, seem to be a bit more slender and "pointy" compared to the very round fish in the show. Google says 37cm max, but I would guess that all the fish he caught exceeded that. Colour is tough, they showed a huge variation from one to the next; none exactly like the one you show, but most or all were much brighter and redder overall. None of them displayed those tendrils on the fins. The anal fins on some had that enlarged rounded point, like a broader version of the Red Hook tail.

The locals in the show were referring to the fish as Pacu, for what that's worth, and prized them as a food fish. The background in the pic you show looks similar, if somewhat tamer than the rough water in which he was shooting them.
Ha neat. From what I am learning all silver dollars are known as pacu in SA. I find it interesting that there are so many of these different types of silver dollars that we have never even heard but they look so cool when they get big.
 

FJB

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All Tometes, Myleus, Myloplus, Mylesinus and a few other genera, even including small Metynnis are referred to as Pacu.
The usage of the name "PACU" by locals means only something as general as "Silver dollar".
 
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Matteus

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Super cool!
Where were you able to order juvenile of T. kranponnhah? By the way, this species nwas only very recently described (Andrade et al., 2016), although it has been known by and used as food to locals of the Xingu River area. Super awesome??

Would you post pictures of your young kranpohnah?? Pretty please?
They don’t look like much yet because they are still small 3-4” or something F5981374-2F69-4FFF-B286-0C1F37D0191A.jpeg82A2B506-D7A1-4968-ADB5-FC3ECD8517AE.jpeg
 
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