Dorado (Salminus brasiliensis) can measure up to 1 metre (3.3 ft) in length. They're golden yellow in colour, with a regular pattern of black tonal scales forming a pattern of longitudinal black lines along the body. It has sometimes reddish fins, a black stripe on the tail, and an especially muscular jaw packed with two rows of saw-like teeth. The dorado has been described as "a prehistoric golden trout or salmon with the jaws of a pit bull terrier". As such, it's bony head and jaw muscles comprise around a quarter of its overall length. Also, as befitting a predator, it has well-developed eyesight and smell. Despite its scientific name and general shape, the dorado isn't related to the salmon - it's freshwater fish without any ocean-going phase.
There is little visual differentiation between the males/females - except some minor physical differences on the anal fin. The most obvious indication is likely to be the size as females grow to be considerably larger - reaching 30 kg. By contrast, the males grow only to around 10 kg.
Southern Screamer
(Chauna torquata)
Length: 83 to 95 cm. The tachã is also called anhuma. It is a robust bird, with long and wide wings, which highlight its silhouette in flight from afar.
Their feet, with long toes, make it easier for them to move around aquatic plants.
It has two spurs, where the wings meet, used as a defensive weapon. It has a very loud and characteristic vocalization, audible from a great distance. It lives, above all, in swampy areas, on the banks of lakes and rivers. It feeds mainly on plant shoots, seeds and leaves. Small animals, especially arthropods, can also be part of the diet. The nest is built at ground level, made of stems, leaves and branches, near or over water, not always hidden among plants. The young, covered with thick yellowish-brown down, are nesting birds and spend their first weeks in the water, among aquatic plants, where they take refuge.
Curiosities:
• The tachã is the sentinel of the flooded fields.
• When scared, warns everyone of the presence of an intruder. The couple screams in a duet, each responding to the other's singing.
• The weight of a tack reaches 4.4 kg.
• The usual posture of the tachã is three to five eggs.
• The incubation period is 43 to 46 days.
• Tackans are usually seen in pairs, but on certain occasions, they group together to form flocks with hundreds of birds.
Based on it's mood, the dorado switches from being Dr Jekyll to Mr. Hyde. It can be mild and timid or it can be a savage predator. It sits at the top of the food chain - actively hunting other smaller fish. It's sharp teeth and powerful jaws make a quick meal of anything that gets in its way - with its jaws very occasionally turning on swimmers or fisherman exercising insufficient care with the fish they've just reeled in. Their favourite hunting grounds appear to be the rough water near waterfalls and rapids, or the entryways into lakes and streams. They also shelter under fallen trees or other underwater obstructions, using them as a station to hunt. The dorado's diet consists primarily of other fish - but analysis of stomach contents have also shown them to eat large inserts, small vertebrates (such as rodents), snakes, lizards and birds.
Dorado are migratory - moving up and down the regions' connected river systems as the seasons, temperature and food sources change. They occupy a range of freshwater environments stretching across southern Brazil, northern Argentina, Uruguay, and into Bolivia and Paraguay. This habitat includes the river basins of the Paraguai (and Pantanal), Uruguai, Chaparé, and Mamoré Rivers, plus the drainage area of the Lagoa dos Patos lagoon in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul. Close relatives of the dorado can also be found in the Rio São Francisco (Salminus franciscanus); the upper Paraná, Amazon and Orinoco basins (Salminus hilarii or tabarana); and in the Santiago and Magdalena basins of Ecuador and Colombia (Salminus affinis or Dorada/Rubia).