Hypancistrus sp.
- HaakonH
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Hypancistrus sp.
Hi all,
A couple of nice Hypancistrus I just got (2 of 17), both 9 cm (3,5"). I'm just curious what you guys would call them...? They are said to be tank bred, so no origin from the wild is known. I've had some feedback already, but I'd like as many opinions as possible
A couple of nice Hypancistrus I just got (2 of 17), both 9 cm (3,5"). I'm just curious what you guys would call them...? They are said to be tank bred, so no origin from the wild is known. I've had some feedback already, but I'd like as many opinions as possible
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2 species!
the first one is a Zebra-Pleco; L046, Hypancistrus zebra.
the other one, I don't know. but he's definitely NOT a zebra. he reminds me of a Hypancistrus L333, but I'm not sure. there are so many undescribed Hypancistrus......
the first one is a Zebra-Pleco; L046, Hypancistrus zebra.
the other one, I don't know. but he's definitely NOT a zebra. he reminds me of a Hypancistrus L333, but I'm not sure. there are so many undescribed Hypancistrus......
Valar Morghulis
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these 2 were sold as a single species?
then the people in the LFS haven't been paying attention.
the one you pictured twice is a bit of an enigma, but the one up front in that breeder is without a doubt a true zebra-plec. oddly marked, but then, no 2 zebra-plecs have the same markings. it's a real L046.
then the people in the LFS haven't been paying attention.
the one you pictured twice is a bit of an enigma, but the one up front in that breeder is without a doubt a true zebra-plec. oddly marked, but then, no 2 zebra-plecs have the same markings. it's a real L046.
Valar Morghulis
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They were indeed sold as the same species. I am the LFS, and these came from a rather wellknown Central-European supplier. They are supposed to come from the same breeder, and from the same parent fish. Clearly that is not the case. A few more pics from 3 of the other 15 specimens:
Individual 3:
Individual 4:
Individual 5:
And these arrived as L173, which has been supported by some skilled breeders:
Individual 3:
Individual 4:
Individual 5:
And these arrived as L173, which has been supported by some skilled breeders:
- sidguppy
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uh oh....
when you say "rather well known central European breeder" my thoughts say "Czechia"!
and IMO fish #3, #4, #5 and the pics below look like hybrids made by crossbreeding L046 and L333
Czech....home and origin of catfish Hybrid Hell
or am I wrong?
those last 4 pics don't look like clean species, they look like hybrids. can't tell why, it's a hunch. but a big one.
QUASIMODO-style hunch. or Peter Sellers' Inspector Clouseau's inflatable hunch.
not good......
when you say "rather well known central European breeder" my thoughts say "Czechia"!
and IMO fish #3, #4, #5 and the pics below look like hybrids made by crossbreeding L046 and L333
Czech....home and origin of catfish Hybrid Hell
or am I wrong?
those last 4 pics don't look like clean species, they look like hybrids. can't tell why, it's a hunch. but a big one.
QUASIMODO-style hunch. or Peter Sellers' Inspector Clouseau's inflatable hunch.
not good......
Valar Morghulis
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Hi !!
individuals 3-4-5 are likely to be Hypancistrus sp L399/400
regarding the L173, well I would say they are still young, and I would wait for them to develop before stating they are indeed L173...
Well know supplier...Glaser???
What is the exact origin of the fish, which supplier and which breeder??
Cheers
Yann
individuals 3-4-5 are likely to be Hypancistrus sp L399/400
regarding the L173, well I would say they are still young, and I would wait for them to develop before stating they are indeed L173...
Well know supplier...Glaser???
What is the exact origin of the fish, which supplier and which breeder??
Cheers
Yann
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OK, here's the deal. 17 individuals were ordered from Glaser in Germany, yes. They were ordered as "L236 German bred". One breeder, I don't know his name, supplied Glaser with these fish. After I received the fish, it was soon clear that among the 17 were more than one species. Either Glaser or their breeder has some explaining to do.
I found this strange, as they were supposed to be German bred fish from the same parents...Something has happened, and I'm trying to find out what. I am in a discussion with Glaser about it. Most of all, I'd like to have a 100% ID to know what these are because we are keeping them for future breeding.
I found this strange, as they were supposed to be German bred fish from the same parents...Something has happened, and I'm trying to find out what. I am in a discussion with Glaser about it. Most of all, I'd like to have a 100% ID to know what these are because we are keeping them for future breeding.
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HI!
From the wels atlas, it says L236 can be quite variable...
Still I found it quite strange to have this amount of variation in a supposed single batch...even in 2...
Some of these fish are looking like L399/400, another like a zebra...
I found it really strange...
Also it is always tougher to ID juvenil/subadult fish rather than full grown..especially on this "xingu" complex"
Cheers
Yann
From the wels atlas, it says L236 can be quite variable...
Still I found it quite strange to have this amount of variation in a supposed single batch...even in 2...
Some of these fish are looking like L399/400, another like a zebra...
I found it really strange...
Also it is always tougher to ID juvenil/subadult fish rather than full grown..especially on this "xingu" complex"
Cheers
Yann
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According to Glaser, one of the parents of these fish is depicted in the Mergus Catfish Atlas II as L-236. I also received a pic displaying the other parent fish. I haven't seen the M.C.A II myself yet, so I haven't seen the L-236 depicted there. The 2 individuals pictured in the first post here may have been added by mistake by the people at Glaser...Oh well. We'll just have to wait and see what they grow up to be.
Anyway, am I right that the original L236 was imported by Transfish/André Werner in Germany? I wonder, because there is an official picture of a so-called L236, taken by Mr.Werner:
...which looks quite different from the original picture taken by Hartl:
Can these 2 be the same species? Werner's fish looks quite identical to the ones we got.
Anyway, am I right that the original L236 was imported by Transfish/André Werner in Germany? I wonder, because there is an official picture of a so-called L236, taken by Mr.Werner:
...which looks quite different from the original picture taken by Hartl:
Can these 2 be the same species? Werner's fish looks quite identical to the ones we got.
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Hi!
I have seen this pic as well...
how to be sure it comes from the Iriri... how different is that fish from L66-L333-L399... for me it is hardly different from what you can find as L399...
this complex is a total mess and will be fun to see what the scientific will do with it...
cheers
Yann
I have seen this pic as well...
how to be sure it comes from the Iriri... how different is that fish from L66-L333-L399... for me it is hardly different from what you can find as L399...
this complex is a total mess and will be fun to see what the scientific will do with it...
cheers
Yann
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I one Hypancistrus identical to the first fish shown and called L46 that came in mixed with a shipment of L333 and L66 but it is not either of those.
So then, L46 variations are still imported occassionally
incidentally with similarly marked Hypancistrus. Any reason why they should not be allowed to breed with classically marked L46?
So then, L46 variations are still imported occassionally
incidentally with similarly marked Hypancistrus. Any reason why they should not be allowed to breed with classically marked L46?
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I have now asked André Werner at Transfish in Germany about the 2 official pictures above. The pic by Hartl he says, is one of 3 originally imported individuals from the Rio Iriri. 8 additional specimens were imported some years later.
The fish in Werner's pic shows a fish collected at the same time as the one in Hartl's pic, but Werner can't remember if it was from the Rio Iriri or from the Rio Xingu. Werner says this is not an L-236, but a different Hypancistrus species still without an L-number. Very similar looking fish are sometimes imported with L66.
Are we any wiser..?
The fish in Werner's pic shows a fish collected at the same time as the one in Hartl's pic, but Werner can't remember if it was from the Rio Iriri or from the Rio Xingu. Werner says this is not an L-236, but a different Hypancistrus species still without an L-number. Very similar looking fish are sometimes imported with L66.
Are we any wiser..?
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Just a little update...
During the last months we have witnessed some development among the 13 individuals we are keeping. One of them, the fish in the first picture in this thread which looks abit like a H.zebra, clearly stands out from the 12 others. It has developed into a beautiful male, but who know's if it's a cross between different species or if it is a strange looking H.zebra...bodyshape seems a little off and it seems to be outgrowing any zebra i have seen. A brand new pic (thank you Erlend!):
Regarding the other 12 specimens, things are happening. The dominant male in the tank is now guarding his first clutch of eggs. This wasn't really planned, as I was hoping to ID them before we started breeding them, but apparently they couldn't be stopped Here he is, guarding his cave:
[img:640:480]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... C00046.jpg[/img]
The adults are now 7-10 cm, and there seem to be more females than males in the group. Several of them have developed a more pale brown colouration covered by pure black wormlines and dots. Many of the obvious females have this colouration. A few of the other individuals are white with black markings, like the alpha male. I can't say if it's gender related though.
A pic of one of the other individuals of unknown gender (thanks again, Erlend!):
[img:500:263]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... -236_2.jpg[/img]
There are approx 20 offspring in this first clutch. The eggs were laid on July 23-24, and today (July 28), 6 already hatched fry plus some empty shells were found outside the cave and placed in a small floating tank. More updates and more pictures will follow soon...
-Haakon
During the last months we have witnessed some development among the 13 individuals we are keeping. One of them, the fish in the first picture in this thread which looks abit like a H.zebra, clearly stands out from the 12 others. It has developed into a beautiful male, but who know's if it's a cross between different species or if it is a strange looking H.zebra...bodyshape seems a little off and it seems to be outgrowing any zebra i have seen. A brand new pic (thank you Erlend!):
Regarding the other 12 specimens, things are happening. The dominant male in the tank is now guarding his first clutch of eggs. This wasn't really planned, as I was hoping to ID them before we started breeding them, but apparently they couldn't be stopped Here he is, guarding his cave:
[img:640:480]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... C00046.jpg[/img]
The adults are now 7-10 cm, and there seem to be more females than males in the group. Several of them have developed a more pale brown colouration covered by pure black wormlines and dots. Many of the obvious females have this colouration. A few of the other individuals are white with black markings, like the alpha male. I can't say if it's gender related though.
A pic of one of the other individuals of unknown gender (thanks again, Erlend!):
[img:500:263]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... -236_2.jpg[/img]
There are approx 20 offspring in this first clutch. The eggs were laid on July 23-24, and today (July 28), 6 already hatched fry plus some empty shells were found outside the cave and placed in a small floating tank. More updates and more pictures will follow soon...
-Haakon
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I have this fish:
It is a wild import which came in with a batch of L333/L66. I think it was called Hypancistrus "Rio Jari" when I asked for an ID previously.
I'll have to get a photo but among the same dozen fish in this group are a couple looking just like the first fish in the OP. They are adults if they are indeed variants of L46 but I doubt they are really L46.
Morphologically they appear virtually identical to L46
It is a wild import which came in with a batch of L333/L66. I think it was called Hypancistrus "Rio Jari" when I asked for an ID previously.
I'll have to get a photo but among the same dozen fish in this group are a couple looking just like the first fish in the OP. They are adults if they are indeed variants of L46 but I doubt they are really L46.
Morphologically they appear virtually identical to L46
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The clutch only consisted of 6 hatched fry, or at least that's what we found. We found approx 15 empty shells though. The fry are pretty big, and their yolksac will be used up any day now.
Regarding the L236, there are a few things worth noticing. The striking colours of the fish in Hartl's picture may be the case of a remarkably beautiful young individual. What I mean is that not all L236 will look like this. With time we should sooner or later have individuals from our clutches looking at least somewhat like Hartl's depicted fish. If this won't ever happen, well then we may seriously doubt them being the same species as the one in the original picture.
Ingo Seidel mentions in an article published in the German magazine Amazonas a couple of years ago how an individual of L236 he kept gradually changed it's colour with age. It's black markings grew broader and the white basecolour faded somewhat. There's a picture of it in the article, showing a fish looking very much like ours. This is something also seen in L66, L333 and others, so it should come as no surprise. However, according to Janne Ekström, there is a slight possibility that L236 MAY not actually be anything but a colour variety of i.e. L333. Even among L333 one can find individuals that look almost like L236...
With this in mind, it's not impossible that individuals of L236 with less striking colours have been and are being shipped out of Brazil under other monikers. IF so, this could certainly cause some problems if they are bought by someone with the intention of breeding them, believing that they bought i.e. some nice L333.
And the fact that L236 comes from the Rio Iriri...well, who knows if that's really true? It COULD be a rumour set out to keep the hunters away from their real origin ;) Let's not forget the value of these fish.
It will be interesting to see the fry we now have grow up. Can't wait to see what pattern and markings they will develop.
-Haakon
Regarding the L236, there are a few things worth noticing. The striking colours of the fish in Hartl's picture may be the case of a remarkably beautiful young individual. What I mean is that not all L236 will look like this. With time we should sooner or later have individuals from our clutches looking at least somewhat like Hartl's depicted fish. If this won't ever happen, well then we may seriously doubt them being the same species as the one in the original picture.
Ingo Seidel mentions in an article published in the German magazine Amazonas a couple of years ago how an individual of L236 he kept gradually changed it's colour with age. It's black markings grew broader and the white basecolour faded somewhat. There's a picture of it in the article, showing a fish looking very much like ours. This is something also seen in L66, L333 and others, so it should come as no surprise. However, according to Janne Ekström, there is a slight possibility that L236 MAY not actually be anything but a colour variety of i.e. L333. Even among L333 one can find individuals that look almost like L236...
With this in mind, it's not impossible that individuals of L236 with less striking colours have been and are being shipped out of Brazil under other monikers. IF so, this could certainly cause some problems if they are bought by someone with the intention of breeding them, believing that they bought i.e. some nice L333.
And the fact that L236 comes from the Rio Iriri...well, who knows if that's really true? It COULD be a rumour set out to keep the hunters away from their real origin ;) Let's not forget the value of these fish.
It will be interesting to see the fry we now have grow up. Can't wait to see what pattern and markings they will develop.
-Haakon
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The male is now guarding his second clutch! They seem to be rather productive...The first clutch is doing very well. All 6 fry are alive and healthy, and their size is pretty impressive. More pics soon. Meanwhile, another pic of one of the adults (thanks to Erlend again!):
And another pic of the dominant male:
[img:640:480]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... 020640.jpg[/img]
-Haakon
And another pic of the dominant male:
[img:640:480]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... 020640.jpg[/img]
-Haakon
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Hello
I obtained similar looking fishes labelled Hypancistrus L333 Porto de Moz and they are quite variable. It's also my feeling that L236 might be a variant of L333
Most of the fishes look exactly like yours and some show variations. Here are some of these variants.
[IMG:1063:456]http://img262.imageshack.us/img262/2320 ... us3oe4.jpg[/img]
Charly
I obtained similar looking fishes labelled Hypancistrus L333 Porto de Moz and they are quite variable. It's also my feeling that L236 might be a variant of L333
Most of the fishes look exactly like yours and some show variations. Here are some of these variants.
[IMG:1063:456]http://img262.imageshack.us/img262/2320 ... us3oe4.jpg[/img]
Charly
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Some more pictures
[IMG:1063:442]http://img251.imageshack.us/img251/1436 ... us1ot6.jpg[/img]
This last one (the 2 pictures are from the same fish) looks quite similar to L236 or what it's suppose to be.
What's the expert's ( Yann HH ) feelngs about these fishes ID ?
Charly
[IMG:1063:442]http://img251.imageshack.us/img251/1436 ... us1ot6.jpg[/img]
This last one (the 2 pictures are from the same fish) looks quite similar to L236 or what it's suppose to be.
What's the expert's ( Yann HH ) feelngs about these fishes ID ?
Charly
Semper pisces
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Update!
Some nice pics of the youngsters, big thanks to Erlend again for taking these shots:
The first pic shows the largest fry, which is approx 1" (2,5 cm) already!
[img:500:339]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... ngel_2.jpg[/img]
[img:500:532]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... ngel_1.jpg[/img]
And here are a couple of pics showing some of the adults, again illustrating the great variety among them. No wonder they may be seen as different species!
[img:900:536]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... 236_10.jpg[/img]
[img:900:457]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... 236_11.jpg[/img]
Two males are now guarding caves, and they have both had clutches in there. However, apparently something has caused the last couple of clutches to not develop. Perhaps it's because the eggs are from females that haven't spawned before?
Interestingly enough the dominant males are the most beautiful specimens of them all. In other similar species, one will often find the males to be pretty dark and showing less contrast than females and younger specimens, but with this species, it seems to be almost the opposite...Of course this may change, but that just doesn't seem very likely right now.
-Haakon
Some nice pics of the youngsters, big thanks to Erlend again for taking these shots:
The first pic shows the largest fry, which is approx 1" (2,5 cm) already!
[img:500:339]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... ngel_2.jpg[/img]
[img:500:532]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... ngel_1.jpg[/img]
And here are a couple of pics showing some of the adults, again illustrating the great variety among them. No wonder they may be seen as different species!
[img:900:536]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... 236_10.jpg[/img]
[img:900:457]http://www.aquazoo.no/shop/images/Fisk/ ... 236_11.jpg[/img]
Two males are now guarding caves, and they have both had clutches in there. However, apparently something has caused the last couple of clutches to not develop. Perhaps it's because the eggs are from females that haven't spawned before?
Interestingly enough the dominant males are the most beautiful specimens of them all. In other similar species, one will often find the males to be pretty dark and showing less contrast than females and younger specimens, but with this species, it seems to be almost the opposite...Of course this may change, but that just doesn't seem very likely right now.
-Haakon