P. ornaticauda
Special thanks to Joni K, Wendy W. from Pontianak.
Ornaticauda is a very special species, which is significantly different from all other parosphromenus species. Its distribution restricts in a narrow area around Anjungan in Kapuas Basin, Kalimantan Barat. Once was this species very easy to obtain via aquatic trading. They were regularly exported with the syntopic P. anjunganensis. But recently the habitats of ornaticauda were severally damaged by oil-palm plantation and other human interferences. It became rarer and rarer on the market. In Aug. 2017 I decided to collect ornaticauda myself and organized an Expedition with my Teammate Ji.
The type locality in Pinyuh was long ago destroyed by oil palm plantation. My local friend Wendy shared his secret location of ornaticauda with me. It is a very small swamp with perfect water condition. Clean black water with a pH of 4.1, TDS 11. It is a very typical habitat of this species, all other typical syntopic species were found here. The population density of ornaticauda was also very high. The problem was that this small habitat was directly threatened by an oil palm plantation. The boarder of the plantation was just 100 meters from the habitat. We were worried that the plantation will eventually destroy this small swamp. Another 2 locations were discovered in this expedition, one is a swamp with high population but very difficult to access, the other was a small river with a very low population density of ornaticauda. Thus, the secret location of Wendy remained as the prior candidate for collection. In the later expedition in April 2018 my teammates Ji and Dai confirmed that one of the three locations, the small river, was destroyed completely in just six months. The secret swamp remained intact until then.
Sadly, the things changed completely when I visited this location after another six months in Oct. 2018. The swamp disappeared completely. The forest was wiped out and the swamp was dug over due to unknown construction project, probably an expansion of the oil palm plantation. No parosphromenus survived. It is sad to see such kind of destruction happened once again. Every six months we will lose some habitats of parosphromenus, and such process seems not to be stopped anyway. Although there are still other habitats of ornaticauda, and this species is now once again regularly collected and exported by the local hunter, I am not sure how long can this species survive under the shadow of oil palm.
The Gallery of Parosphromenus ornaticauda
Page under construction