n
old favourite in the hobby for many years for our
Cory buffs is our factsheet of the month for March
2015, G. napoensis. It is quite similar to
G.
nanus and also. Males
of G. napoensis usually have a black blotch
to the dorsal fin and the females do not, as they
sport a more or less clear dorsal fin, sometimes with
a hint of a blotch. There are of course exceptions
to this rule as this species is quite variable in
colouration and markings. It is a member of the so
called "elegans" group which include C.
nanus and G.
elegans along with
around another 22 species. They all have this basic
short and compacted head shape and sexual dimorphism,
in most of these species this is the norm.
Gastrodermus
napoensis
-
female
If there is any
work carried out on this group in the future there
is a very good chance that the genus name would revert
back to Gastrodermus Cope, 1878. The two
images show the sexual dimophism in this species and
the vast majority of the "elegans" group.
Gastrodermus
napoensis
-
male
Remarks:Corydoras
napoensis
is placed in Lineage 5 and after a revision by "Angelica
C Dias, Luiz F C Tencatt, Fabio F Roxo, Gabriel de
Souza da Costa Silva, Sérgio A Santos, Marcelo
R Britto, Martin I Taylor, Claudio Oliveira 2024"
of the genus name Gastrodermus Cope, 1878
it is now Gastrodermus napoensis.
Synonyms
Corydoras napoensis
Common
Name
None
Family
Callichthyidae
Subfamily
Corydoradinae
Distribution
South America:
Western
Amazon River basin, eastern Ecuador and Peru. Type
locality: Napo, Lagartococha, affluent septentrional
du Rio Aguarico, entre l’embouchure de la rivière
(0º39'S, 75º16'W) et le village de Garzacocha
(0º28'S, 75º21'W), bassin du Rio Napo, Ecuador.
Size
Male: 4.5cm (1¾ins)
Female: 5.0cm (2ins)
Temp.
23-25°C (73-77°F)
p.H.
6.5-7.2.
Characteristics
Head: short and compact.
Colouration
Light brown body colour. Dorsal
fin in male with a black blotch, females more or less
clear dorsal fin, sometimes with a hint of a blotch.
Fins are colourless with sometimes a hint of yellow
in good condition. Body pattern consists of three
dark bands which extend from the head to the caudal
peduncle. The head has a mottled pattern which extends
over the top half of the body.
Aquarium
Care & Compatibility
Can be kept with a vast variety
of peaceful fish but would suffer with large Cichlids.
This is akin to most of this genus, very peaceful,
and would be best housed with small to medium tank
mates such as Tetras, Rasboras and Danios or
in a species tank for breeding purposes. This
is akin to most of this genus, very peaceful, and
would be best housed with small to medium tank mates
such as Tetras, Rasboras and Danios or
in a species tank for breeding purposes.
Sexual
Differences
Dorsal fin in male with a black
blotch, females more or less clear dorsal fin, sometimes
with a hint of a blotch. Males are usually more colourful.
Reproduction
Has been bred in the hobby
and they spawn in the same Corydoras pattern
which you can read about in the many articles in the
Breeding Articles section here.
Diet
A good quality flake food and
tablet food for adults with sporadic feedings of frozen
or live food will keep your Corydoras/Gastrodermus
in good health.
Glossary
of Terms
Dorsal:
The primary rayed fin(s)
on top of the body. Caudal peduncle:
The area between the dorsal
fin and the tail. Dimorphism: The
morphological variations of one species.
Etymology
Gastrodermus:
The lining membrane of the alimentary tract of an
invertebrate, used especially when the germ-layer
origin is obscure. napoensis: Named after Napo,
one of the regions from which it was collected.
References
Alexandrou,
Markos & Taylor, Martin. (2011). Evolution,
ecology and taxonomy of the Corydoradinae revisited.
Angelica C Dias, Luiz F C Tencatt, Fabio F
Roxo, Gabriel de Souza da Costa Silva, Sérgio
A Santos, Marcelo R Britto, Martin I Taylor, Claudio
Oliveira, Phylogenomic analyses in the complex
Neotropical subfamily Corydoradinae (Siluriformes:
Callichthyidae) with a new classification based on
morphological and molecular data, Zoological Journal
of the Linnean Society, 2024;, zlae053.
Ferraris, C.J. Jr., 2007. Checklist
of catfishes, recent and fossil (Osteichthyes: Siluriformes),
and catalogue of siluriform primary types. Zootaxa
1418:1-628. Ian A. M. Fuller & Hans-Georg Evers
2011, Identifying Corydoradinae Catfish: Aspidoras-Brochis-Corydoras-Scleromystax-C-numbers
& CW-numbers 141p. Ian Fuller Enterprises. Seus, Werner:
Corydoras, The most Popular armoured catfishes of
South America. www.corydorasworld.com
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