Need help with Royal ID

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ZebraFanatic
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Joined: 15 Sep 2006, 14:16
Location 2: Sydney, Australia

Need help with Royal ID

Post by ZebraFanatic »

Hi Guys,

I bought this royal a while ago as an LDA63 but am now thinking that it's not, and I am hoping that someone can give me a clue of it's proper L number. He's 11.5 cm TL and eating well.

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Many thanks in advance,

Nick.
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ZebraFanatic
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Location 2: Sydney, Australia

Post by ZebraFanatic »

Anyone????
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MatsP
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Post by MatsP »

All forms of Royal are pretty much alike - the best way to determine which form it is would be by knowing the capture location.

Without such information, the most likely conclusion is that it's a "Common" .

I'm fairly sure it's NOT the Xingu variety:
1. The eye colour is to bright red.
2. The fins are not red enough.

I think it's P. nigrolineatus "standard variety".

--
Mats
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Shane
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Post by Shane »

It is not P. nigrolineatus "proper" from the llanos. At that size, P. nigrolineatus from the llanos have a slate gray body with the tail tell (my pun) white "window." The longer rostrum points to one of the populations from the southern Amazonas tributaries.
-Shane
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ZebraFanatic
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Joined: 15 Sep 2006, 14:16
Location 2: Sydney, Australia

Post by ZebraFanatic »

Thanks guys,

Apart from the the fact of not kowing it's exact population am I safe to say it is an L190 then?
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MatsP
Posts: 21038
Joined: 06 Oct 2004, 13:58
My articles: 4
My images: 28
My cats species list: 117 (i:33, k:0)
My aquaria list: 10 (i:8)
My BLogs: 4 (i:0, p:164)
Spotted: 187
Location 1: North of Cambridge
Location 2: England.

Post by MatsP »

Technically, it is NOT L190 according to what Shane writes (and he's been in Venezuela where the real L190 comes from).

There are probably many more variants of this fish than there are L-number variations, because they are wide-spread, and each major river will have a slightly different variety of the species - assuming that it's actually ONE species, which I'll leave to the scientists to decided [colouration on it's own is not a reason to say they are NOT the same species, but combine colouration with some other features, and it could make it into a different species]. A review of the species and associated variants would probably be a good thing to put on the wish-list for Ichtyology research.

--
Mats
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