As I thought a definition is not possible
You might have misunderstood what I meant here grokefish. A definition
is possible (the phylogenetic species concept - PSC), and although no definition is perfect, it works very well.
There are always exceptions, but generally these are in the minority, with most species being "good", and easily diagnosable to a trained eye. Hybridisation is by no means a common phenomenon, as it carries with it the potential for significant evolutionary disadvantages.
individuals L066 and L333 are in fact the same organism as they can in fact produce offspring, so as far as nature, in the form of the fish themselves, is concerned the labels L333 and L066 are pointless
No, under the PSC, these are likely to be different species. They have clearly different morphologies. Now you may wonder what constitutes an appropriate character to use in phylogenetic analysis and the diagnosis of new species. This is up to the individual taxonomist and his experience with the group, but remember journals are peer reviewed, so it is unlikely a load rubbish will get published.
I can't think of a diagnoses off the top of my head of any species based exclusively on coloration of fish, so if these fish are different species they may have other differences too.
Funnily enough, they most recent description (Armbruster
et al, 2007) of four new
Hypancistrus (L201, L129, L199 & L339) from the Orinoco was almost entirely based on colour pattern characters. The pattern and colour of
Hypancistrus is likely to be highly valuable in the distinction of further new species, but the problem and skill is turning the diversity into sound and reproducible cladistic characters.
genetic differences are not widely used yet, although they've been used in the paper of at least one species of fish so far
The use of molecular characters by systematists is a very useful and powerful tool, but unfortunately the history of a gene is not necessarily the history of a species, and to reveal the true phylogeny, many many genes should be studied, which can be expensive and time consuming. Much of the difference between closely related species can be identified by a trained eye, so it is generally better to use molecular techniques to answer more complicated questions across higher taxonomic levels.
Having said that, the
Hypancistrus of the Rio Xingu would be excellent candidates for using a molecular study to get a handle on how significant colour/pattern can be in species delimitation.