My interest in the finned creatures tracks back to my childhood growing up on the Brazilian Northeast coast. At that time, a Jangada fishing boat mooring on the sandy beaches of Tibau would easily capture my attention for hours. In that desert-like landscape, there was nothing more interesting than a fisherman's basket. Hairtails, tarpons, robalos, lookdowns, and pompanos were among the frequent catches—all this diversity of finned creatures fascinated me and subconsciously drove my professional career.
Soon enough, I saw myself funded by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) to study marine fishes' chromosomal evolution at the Universidad Federal do Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN). Together with Dr. Wagner Molina, I took my first steps as a young scientist. Dr. Molina provided me with all the tools I needed to lead my own research project. This fantastic opportunity allowed me to experience producing and communicating science early in my undergraduate studies. My first scientific paper was an outcome of this experience: a study which reported that remarkable differences in the chromosomal configurations may work as a post-zygotic barrier in two sympatric species of silversides common to the Brazilian coast. Here I was once more, exploring the same sandy beaches I grew up in. Still, this time as a fledgling scientist asking himself about the processes responsible for the great diversity of fishes that have always fascinated me.